Is there a (better) way to access $wpdb results?
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I have this:
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d);',$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
I want to know if the query result is 1 or 0.
But a var_dump() of $result give something like:
array (size=1)
0 =>
object(stdClass)[4592]
public 'EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =2)' => string '0' (length=1)
Which means I should first get element 0 of array, but then, I need to access a property which name is literally the whole query.
I yet need to test if that is even doable in php (I guess yes but I don't remember in this language precisely), and what happens if I have multiline query ...
Anyway I find that so ugly ... is there a cleaned way to get query result?
Maybe there's a way to give a name string to the query or so?
Here is what I'm trying and this isn't even working ...
$qeryAsPropertyName = substr($wpdbp,7, -strlen($wpdbp-1));
$result0 = $result[0]->$qeryAsPropertyName;
wpdb sql
add a comment |
I have this:
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d);',$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
I want to know if the query result is 1 or 0.
But a var_dump() of $result give something like:
array (size=1)
0 =>
object(stdClass)[4592]
public 'EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =2)' => string '0' (length=1)
Which means I should first get element 0 of array, but then, I need to access a property which name is literally the whole query.
I yet need to test if that is even doable in php (I guess yes but I don't remember in this language precisely), and what happens if I have multiline query ...
Anyway I find that so ugly ... is there a cleaned way to get query result?
Maybe there's a way to give a name string to the query or so?
Here is what I'm trying and this isn't even working ...
$qeryAsPropertyName = substr($wpdbp,7, -strlen($wpdbp-1));
$result0 = $result[0]->$qeryAsPropertyName;
wpdb sql
1
That might be a MySQL-generated column name. You could trySELECT EXISTS (...) AS name
to give it a different name (where you can quote name in backticks).
– Rup
yesterday
This worked thank you. If you write it as answer I can check it as solution.
– TTT
yesterday
add a comment |
I have this:
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d);',$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
I want to know if the query result is 1 or 0.
But a var_dump() of $result give something like:
array (size=1)
0 =>
object(stdClass)[4592]
public 'EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =2)' => string '0' (length=1)
Which means I should first get element 0 of array, but then, I need to access a property which name is literally the whole query.
I yet need to test if that is even doable in php (I guess yes but I don't remember in this language precisely), and what happens if I have multiline query ...
Anyway I find that so ugly ... is there a cleaned way to get query result?
Maybe there's a way to give a name string to the query or so?
Here is what I'm trying and this isn't even working ...
$qeryAsPropertyName = substr($wpdbp,7, -strlen($wpdbp-1));
$result0 = $result[0]->$qeryAsPropertyName;
wpdb sql
I have this:
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d);',$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
I want to know if the query result is 1 or 0.
But a var_dump() of $result give something like:
array (size=1)
0 =>
object(stdClass)[4592]
public 'EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =2)' => string '0' (length=1)
Which means I should first get element 0 of array, but then, I need to access a property which name is literally the whole query.
I yet need to test if that is even doable in php (I guess yes but I don't remember in this language precisely), and what happens if I have multiline query ...
Anyway I find that so ugly ... is there a cleaned way to get query result?
Maybe there's a way to give a name string to the query or so?
Here is what I'm trying and this isn't even working ...
$qeryAsPropertyName = substr($wpdbp,7, -strlen($wpdbp-1));
$result0 = $result[0]->$qeryAsPropertyName;
wpdb sql
wpdb sql
edited yesterday
TTT
asked yesterday
TTTTTT
1728
1728
1
That might be a MySQL-generated column name. You could trySELECT EXISTS (...) AS name
to give it a different name (where you can quote name in backticks).
– Rup
yesterday
This worked thank you. If you write it as answer I can check it as solution.
– TTT
yesterday
add a comment |
1
That might be a MySQL-generated column name. You could trySELECT EXISTS (...) AS name
to give it a different name (where you can quote name in backticks).
– Rup
yesterday
This worked thank you. If you write it as answer I can check it as solution.
– TTT
yesterday
1
1
That might be a MySQL-generated column name. You could try
SELECT EXISTS (...) AS name
to give it a different name (where you can quote name in backticks).– Rup
yesterday
That might be a MySQL-generated column name. You could try
SELECT EXISTS (...) AS name
to give it a different name (where you can quote name in backticks).– Rup
yesterday
This worked thank you. If you write it as answer I can check it as solution.
– TTT
yesterday
This worked thank you. If you write it as answer I can check it as solution.
– TTT
yesterday
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
The string you're seeing is the column name that MySQL is using for the result, because it doesn't have any better ideas. One way is to give it an explicit name to use instead with AS
, e.g.
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d) AS `exists`;',
$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
then the column name will be exists
, i.e.
$result = $result[0]['exists'];
However I'm surprised there isn't a 'execute query and return scalar' method in $wpdb
that you can use instead to just fetch a single result like this.
add a comment |
The WPDB Class has quite a few methods which vary what will be returned.
Using WPDB::get_results()
returns an array of objects whose properties end up being what it expects to be returned. In this case may be best to alias your subquery. For example, if I wanted to check if user ID 1 exists I could say:
$results = $wpdb->get_results( "SELECT EXISTS( SELECT ID FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = 1 ) AS 'exists'" );
if( ! empty( $results ) && $results[0]->exists ) {
/* ... */
}
A better solution would be, if you just want one thing returned, you could use WPDB::get_var()
$exists = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT EXISTS ( [some query] WHERE user_id = %d )
", $user_id ) );
if( $exists ) {
/* ... */
}
Or if you wanted the username by ID:
$username = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT user_login FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = %d
", $user_id ) );
if( ! empty( $username ) ) {
printf( 'User %d user name is: %s', $user_id, $username );
}
That being said your best bet is to read through the documentation and look at the available methods to figure out which is best in your user case:
https://codex.wordpress.org/Class_Reference/wpdb
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The string you're seeing is the column name that MySQL is using for the result, because it doesn't have any better ideas. One way is to give it an explicit name to use instead with AS
, e.g.
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d) AS `exists`;',
$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
then the column name will be exists
, i.e.
$result = $result[0]['exists'];
However I'm surprised there isn't a 'execute query and return scalar' method in $wpdb
that you can use instead to just fetch a single result like this.
add a comment |
The string you're seeing is the column name that MySQL is using for the result, because it doesn't have any better ideas. One way is to give it an explicit name to use instead with AS
, e.g.
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d) AS `exists`;',
$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
then the column name will be exists
, i.e.
$result = $result[0]['exists'];
However I'm surprised there isn't a 'execute query and return scalar' method in $wpdb
that you can use instead to just fetch a single result like this.
add a comment |
The string you're seeing is the column name that MySQL is using for the result, because it doesn't have any better ideas. One way is to give it an explicit name to use instead with AS
, e.g.
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d) AS `exists`;',
$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
then the column name will be exists
, i.e.
$result = $result[0]['exists'];
However I'm surprised there isn't a 'execute query and return scalar' method in $wpdb
that you can use instead to just fetch a single result like this.
The string you're seeing is the column name that MySQL is using for the result, because it doesn't have any better ideas. One way is to give it an explicit name to use instead with AS
, e.g.
global $wpdb;
$wpdbp = $wpdb->prepare('SELECT EXISTS ([some query] WHERE user_id =%d) AS `exists`;',
$target_user_id);
$result = $wpdb->get_results($wpdbp);
then the column name will be exists
, i.e.
$result = $result[0]['exists'];
However I'm surprised there isn't a 'execute query and return scalar' method in $wpdb
that you can use instead to just fetch a single result like this.
answered yesterday
RupRup
784715
784715
add a comment |
add a comment |
The WPDB Class has quite a few methods which vary what will be returned.
Using WPDB::get_results()
returns an array of objects whose properties end up being what it expects to be returned. In this case may be best to alias your subquery. For example, if I wanted to check if user ID 1 exists I could say:
$results = $wpdb->get_results( "SELECT EXISTS( SELECT ID FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = 1 ) AS 'exists'" );
if( ! empty( $results ) && $results[0]->exists ) {
/* ... */
}
A better solution would be, if you just want one thing returned, you could use WPDB::get_var()
$exists = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT EXISTS ( [some query] WHERE user_id = %d )
", $user_id ) );
if( $exists ) {
/* ... */
}
Or if you wanted the username by ID:
$username = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT user_login FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = %d
", $user_id ) );
if( ! empty( $username ) ) {
printf( 'User %d user name is: %s', $user_id, $username );
}
That being said your best bet is to read through the documentation and look at the available methods to figure out which is best in your user case:
https://codex.wordpress.org/Class_Reference/wpdb
add a comment |
The WPDB Class has quite a few methods which vary what will be returned.
Using WPDB::get_results()
returns an array of objects whose properties end up being what it expects to be returned. In this case may be best to alias your subquery. For example, if I wanted to check if user ID 1 exists I could say:
$results = $wpdb->get_results( "SELECT EXISTS( SELECT ID FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = 1 ) AS 'exists'" );
if( ! empty( $results ) && $results[0]->exists ) {
/* ... */
}
A better solution would be, if you just want one thing returned, you could use WPDB::get_var()
$exists = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT EXISTS ( [some query] WHERE user_id = %d )
", $user_id ) );
if( $exists ) {
/* ... */
}
Or if you wanted the username by ID:
$username = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT user_login FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = %d
", $user_id ) );
if( ! empty( $username ) ) {
printf( 'User %d user name is: %s', $user_id, $username );
}
That being said your best bet is to read through the documentation and look at the available methods to figure out which is best in your user case:
https://codex.wordpress.org/Class_Reference/wpdb
add a comment |
The WPDB Class has quite a few methods which vary what will be returned.
Using WPDB::get_results()
returns an array of objects whose properties end up being what it expects to be returned. In this case may be best to alias your subquery. For example, if I wanted to check if user ID 1 exists I could say:
$results = $wpdb->get_results( "SELECT EXISTS( SELECT ID FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = 1 ) AS 'exists'" );
if( ! empty( $results ) && $results[0]->exists ) {
/* ... */
}
A better solution would be, if you just want one thing returned, you could use WPDB::get_var()
$exists = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT EXISTS ( [some query] WHERE user_id = %d )
", $user_id ) );
if( $exists ) {
/* ... */
}
Or if you wanted the username by ID:
$username = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT user_login FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = %d
", $user_id ) );
if( ! empty( $username ) ) {
printf( 'User %d user name is: %s', $user_id, $username );
}
That being said your best bet is to read through the documentation and look at the available methods to figure out which is best in your user case:
https://codex.wordpress.org/Class_Reference/wpdb
The WPDB Class has quite a few methods which vary what will be returned.
Using WPDB::get_results()
returns an array of objects whose properties end up being what it expects to be returned. In this case may be best to alias your subquery. For example, if I wanted to check if user ID 1 exists I could say:
$results = $wpdb->get_results( "SELECT EXISTS( SELECT ID FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = 1 ) AS 'exists'" );
if( ! empty( $results ) && $results[0]->exists ) {
/* ... */
}
A better solution would be, if you just want one thing returned, you could use WPDB::get_var()
$exists = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT EXISTS ( [some query] WHERE user_id = %d )
", $user_id ) );
if( $exists ) {
/* ... */
}
Or if you wanted the username by ID:
$username = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare( "
SELECT user_login FROM {$wpdb->users} WHERE ID = %d
", $user_id ) );
if( ! empty( $username ) ) {
printf( 'User %d user name is: %s', $user_id, $username );
}
That being said your best bet is to read through the documentation and look at the available methods to figure out which is best in your user case:
https://codex.wordpress.org/Class_Reference/wpdb
answered yesterday
Howdy_McGee♦Howdy_McGee
13.8k1459127
13.8k1459127
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
That might be a MySQL-generated column name. You could try
SELECT EXISTS (...) AS name
to give it a different name (where you can quote name in backticks).– Rup
yesterday
This worked thank you. If you write it as answer I can check it as solution.
– TTT
yesterday