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Returns an object with properties representing columns in the fetched row

db2_fetch_object

(PECL ibm_db2 >= 1.0.0)

db2_fetch_object Returns an object with properties representing columns in the fetched row

Description

object db2_fetch_object ( resource $stmt [, int $row_number ] )

Returns an object in which each property represents a column returned in the row fetched from a result set.

Parameters

stmt

A valid stmt resource containing a result set.

row_number

Requests a specific 1-indexed row from the result set. Passing this parameter results in a PHP warning if the result set uses a forward-only cursor.

Return Values

Returns an object representing a single row in the result set. The properties of the object map to the names of the columns in the result set.

The IBM DB2, Cloudscape, and Apache Derby database servers typically fold column names to upper-case, so the object properties will reflect that case.

If your SELECT statement calls a scalar function to modify the value of a column, the database servers return the column number as the name of the column in the result set. If you prefer a more descriptive column name and object property, you can use the AS clause to assign a name to the column in the result set.

Returns FALSE if no row was retrieved.

Examples

Example #1 A db2_fetch_object() example

The following example issues a SELECT statement with a scalar function, RTRIM, that removes whitespace from the end of the column. Rather than creating an object with the properties "BREED" and "2", we use the AS clause in the SELECT statement to assign the name "name" to the modified column. The database server folds the column names to upper-case, resulting in an object with the properties "BREED" and "NAME".

<?php
$conn 
db2_connect($database$user$password);

$sql "SELECT breed, RTRIM(name) AS name
    FROM animals
    WHERE id = ?"
;

if (
$conn) {
    
$stmt db2_prepare($conn$sql);
    
db2_execute($stmt, array(0));

    while (
$pet db2_fetch_object($stmt)) {
        echo 
"Come here, {$pet->NAME}, my little {$pet->BREED}!";
    }
    
db2_close($conn);
}
?>

The above example will output:

 
 Come here, Pook, my little cat!