mysql_fetch_object

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

mysql_fetch_objectFetch a result row as an object

Description

object mysql_fetch_object ( resource $result [, string $class_name [, array $params ]] )

Returns an object with properties that correspond to the fetched row and moves the internal data pointer ahead.

Parameters

result

The result resource that is being evaluated. This result comes from a call to mysql_query().

class_name

The name of the class to instantiate, set the properties of and return. If not specified, a stdClass object is returned.

params

An optional array of parameters to pass to the constructor for class_name objects.

Return Values

Returns an object with string properties that correspond to the fetched row, or FALSE if there are no more rows.

Changelog

Version Description
5.0.0 Added the ability to return as a different object.

Examples

Example #1 mysql_fetch_object() example

<?php
mysql_connect
("hostname""user""password");
mysql_select_db("mydb");
$result mysql_query("select * from mytable");
while (
$row mysql_fetch_object($result)) {
    echo 
$row->user_id;
    echo 
$row->fullname;
}
mysql_free_result($result);
?>

Example #2 mysql_fetch_object() example

<?php
class foo {
    public 
$name;
}

mysql_connect("hostname""user""password");
mysql_select_db("mydb");

$result mysql_query("select name from mytable limit 1");
$obj mysql_fetch_object($result'foo');
var_dump($obj);
?>

Notes

Note: Performance

Speed-wise, the function is identical to mysql_fetch_array(), and almost as quick as mysql_fetch_row() (the difference is insignificant).

Note:

mysql_fetch_object() is similar to mysql_fetch_array(), with one difference - an object is returned, instead of an array. Indirectly, that means that you can only access the data by the field names, and not by their offsets (numbers are illegal property names).

Note: Field names returned by this function are case-sensitive.

Note: This function sets NULL fields to the PHP NULL value.

See Also