This would be so much more useful if it contained information on what the object returned contains. From var_dump() it seems just an assoc array in object form. But is there column type info, for example?
(PHP 4 >= 4.0.2, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
odbc_fetch_object — Fetch a result row as an object
$statement
, int $row
= -1
) : stdClass|falseFetch an object from an ODBC query.
statement
The result resource from odbc_exec().
row
Optionally choose which row number to retrieve.
Returns an object that corresponds to the fetched row, or false
if there
are no more rows.
Note: This function exists when compiled with DBMaker, IBM DB2 or UnixODBC support.
This would be so much more useful if it contained information on what the object returned contains. From var_dump() it seems just an assoc array in object form. But is there column type info, for example?
This function requires one of the following to exist: Windows, DB2, or UNIXODBC.
odbc_fetch_object() works nice with PHP 4.3.3 under W2K with IBM DB2 V.7.2 and V.8.1:
<?php
$conn = odbc_connect($db_name, $username, $password) or die(odbc_error_msg());
$sql = "SELECT * FROM TABLE";
$result = odbc_exec($conn, $sql);
while ($rows = odbc_fetch_object($result)) {
print $rows->COLUMNNAME;
}
odbc_close($conn);
?>
hey "general at maccrafters dot com"
thank you very much for your code. it saved me time!
however i extended it a bit!
---------------------------------------------
function __odbc_fetch_object($res)
{
if( function_exists("odbc_fetch_object") )
return odbc_fetch_object($res);
$rs = array();
$rs_obj = false;
if( odbc_fetch_into($res, &$rs) )
{
foreach( $rs as $key=>$value )
{
$fkey = odbc_field_name($res, $key+1);
$rs_obj->$fkey = trim($value);
}
}
return $rs_obj;
}
---------------------------------------------
cheers, jaz
my 2 cents:
function data($res) {
$obj = new stdClass();
$data_array = array();
if (!odbc_fetch_into($res, $data_array)) {
return 0;
}
$num_fields = odbc_num_fields($res);
for ($i = 0;$i < $num_fields; $i++) {
$name = odbc_field_name($res, $i + 1);
if (!$name) {
return 0;
}
$obj->{$name} = $data_array[$i];
}
return $obj;
}
works fine for me (PHP 4.3.1)
I asked one of the developers to enable this function in the CVS. I tried it and it worked. I didnt do anything special. I was using a Microsoft Access ODBC driver that came with my Windows XP Pro Install.
I was using the Apache web server.
Charles
Here's a bit of code I came up with tha behaves just like mysql_fetch_object()
function odbc_fetch_object($result)
{
$rs=array();
if(odbc_fetch_into($result,&$rs))
{
foreach($rs as $key=>$value)
{
$fkey=strtoupper(odbc_field_name($result,$key+1));
$rs_obj->$fkey = trim($value);
}
}
return($rs_obj);
}
Special thanks to previous posters for giving me a starting point for this code.
If you're using Masoud's code in PHP4.2+, change the fifth line to:
odbc_fetch_into($result,&$rs);
(the order of arguments have changed)
It' possible to get both odbc_fetch_object() and odbc_fetch_array() to work just by removing #ifdef HAVE_DBMAKER/#endif in php_odbc.h line 216 (219) and the same in php_odbc.c line 87 (90) and 1229 (1380).
I've done this sucessfully in the PHP 4.2.0 release using ODBC towards a MySQL database.
I really can't understand why the #ifdef is there from the beginning, but they do have their reasons.
These were the files i "patched"
/* $Id: php_odbc.c,v 1.120.2.1 2002/04/08 22:21:30 sniper Exp $ */
/* $Id: php_odbc.h,v 1.45.2.1 2002/03/12 02:27:47 sniper Exp $ */
This function not availible in PHP 4.1.1 , you can try this :
if (function_exists(odbc_fetch_object))
return;
function odbc_fetch_object($result, $rownumber=1) {
$rs=array();
odbc_fetch_into($result, $rownumber,$rs);
foreach ($rs as $key => $value) {
$fkey=strtolower(odbc_field_name($result, $key+1));
$rs_obj->$fkey = $value;
}
return $rs_obj;
}
if you wanna use this function in a loop you must set rownumber parameter
you can't use this function like :
while ($myobj=odbc_fetch_object($res)) {
....
}