PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

pg_send_query_params

(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)

pg_send_query_paramsSubmits a command and separate parameters to the server without waiting for the result(s)

Description

pg_send_query_params(PgSql\Connection $connection, string $query, array $params): int|bool

Submits a command and separate parameters to the server without waiting for the result(s).

This is equivalent to pg_send_query() except that query parameters can be specified separately from the query string. The function's parameters are handled identically to pg_query_params(). Like pg_query_params(), it will not work on pre-7.4 PostgreSQL connections, and it allows only one command in the query string.

Parameters

connection

An PgSql\Connection instance.

query

The parameterized SQL statement. Must contain only a single statement. (multiple statements separated by semi-colons are not allowed.) If any parameters are used, they are referred to as $1, $2, etc.

params

An array of parameter values to substitute for the $1, $2, etc. placeholders in the original prepared query string. The number of elements in the array must match the number of placeholders.

Return Values

Returns true on success, false or 0 on failure. Use pg_get_result() to determine the query result.

Changelog

Version Description
8.1.0 The connection parameter expects an PgSql\Connection instance now; previously, a resource was expected.

Examples

Example #1 Using pg_send_query_params()

<?php
$dbconn
= pg_connect("dbname=publisher") or die("Could not connect");

// Using parameters. Note that it is not necessary to quote or escape
// the parameter.
pg_send_query_params($dbconn, 'select count(*) from authors where city = $1', array('Perth'));

// Compare against basic pg_send_query usage
$str = pg_escape_string('Perth');
pg_send_query($dbconn, "select count(*) from authors where city = '{$str}'");
?>

See Also

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