db2_fetch_array

(PECL ibm_db2 >= 1.0.1)

db2_fetch_array Returns an array, indexed by column position, representing a row in a result set

Description

db2_fetch_array(resource $stmt, int $row_number = -1): array|false

Returns an array, indexed by column position, representing a row in a result set. The columns are 0-indexed.

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 a 0-indexed array with column values indexed by the column position representing the next or requested row in the result set. Returns false if there are no rows left in the result set, or if the row requested by row_number does not exist in the result set.

Examples

Example #1 Iterating through a forward-only cursor

If you call db2_fetch_array() without a specific row number, it automatically retrieves the next row in the result set.

<?php

$sql
= "SELECT id, name, breed, weight FROM animals ORDER BY breed";
$stmt = db2_prepare($conn, $sql);
$result = db2_execute($stmt);

while (
$row = db2_fetch_array($stmt)) {
printf ("%-5d %-16s %-32s %10s\n",
$row[0], $row[1], $row[2], $row[3]);
}
?>

The above example will output:

0     Pook             cat                                    3.20
5     Rickety Ride     goat                                   9.70
2     Smarty           horse                                350.00

Example #2 Retrieving specific rows with db2_fetch_array() from a scrollable cursor

If your result set uses a scrollable cursor, you can call db2_fetch_array() with a specific row number. The following example retrieves every other row in the result set, starting with the second row.

<?php

$sql
= "SELECT id, name, breed, weight FROM animals ORDER BY breed";
$result = db2_exec($stmt, $sql, array('cursor' => DB2_SCROLLABLE));

$i=2;
while (
$row = db2_fetch_array($result, $i)) {
printf ("%-5d %-16s %-32s %10s\n",
$row[0], $row[1], $row[2], $row[3]);
$i = $i + 2;
}
?>

The above example will output:

0     Pook             cat                                    3.20
5     Rickety Ride     goat                                   9.70
2     Smarty           horse                                350.00

See Also

  • db2_fetch_assoc() - Returns an array, indexed by column name, representing a row in a result set
  • db2_fetch_both() - Returns an array, indexed by both column name and position, representing a row in a result set
  • db2_fetch_object() - Returns an object with properties representing columns in the fetched row
  • db2_fetch_row() - Sets the result set pointer to the next row or requested row
  • db2_result() - Returns a single column from a row in the result set
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