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Posted by Rich on 01/31/06 19:24
In article <1138722255.036505.213460@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com>, Jeff says...
>
>What's the best practice for handling the following situation, when I
>do an update like this:
>
>$sql = "UPDATE haha SET papa="loco" WHERE id=$var";
>$res = mysql_query($sql,$db);
>
>If I don't get a match in my where clause, i.e., 12!=44 the UPDATE does
>not occur but mysql_errno == 0 and mysql_error = "" so I can't capture
>the failure.
>
>Any thoughts?
>
>Jeff
>
If there isn't a match, then there would just be no updates to make, so that
won't show up with mysql_error.
It wouldn't be a failure because the query did try to make a match, but there
was just nothing to return back. Think there's a "mysql_affected_rows" function
that may be closer to what you're looking for.
Rich
--
Newsguy -- http://newsguy.com
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