(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5)
pg_delete — Deletes records
$connection
, string $table_name
, array $assoc_array
[, int $options
= PGSQL_DML_EXEC
] )
pg_delete() deletes records from a table specified by
the keys and values in assoc_array
. If options
is
specified, pg_convert() is applied
to assoc_array
with the specified options.
connection
PostgreSQL database connection resource.
table_name
Name of the table from which to delete rows.
assoc_array
An array whose keys are field names in the table table_name
,
and whose values are the values of those fields that are to be deleted.
options
Any number of PGSQL_CONV_FORCE_NULL
,
PGSQL_DML_NO_CONV
,
PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE
,
PGSQL_DML_EXEC
,
PGSQL_DML_ASYNC
or
PGSQL_DML_STRING
combined. If PGSQL_DML_STRING
is part of the
options
then query string is returned. When PGSQL_DML_NO_CONV
or PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE
is set, it does not call pg_convert() internally.
Returns TRUE
on success or FALSE
on failure. Returns string if PGSQL_DML_STRING
is passed
via options
.
Example #1 pg_delete() example
<?php
$db = pg_connect('dbname=foo');
// This is safe, since $_POST is converted automatically
$res = pg_delete($db, 'post_log', $_POST);
if ($res) {
echo "POST data is deleted: $res\n";
} else {
echo "User must have sent wrong inputs\n";
}
?>
Version | Description |
---|---|
5.6.0 |
No longer experimental. Added PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE constant,
TRUE /FALSE and NULL data type support.
|
5.5.3/5.4.19 |
Direct SQL injection to table_name and Indirect SQL
injection to identifiers are fixed.
|