diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'user_guide/database')
-rw-r--r-- | user_guide/database/configuration.html | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | user_guide/database/results.html | 23 |
2 files changed, 23 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/user_guide/database/configuration.html b/user_guide/database/configuration.html index e9db5fc87..d71cd34db 100644 --- a/user_guide/database/configuration.html +++ b/user_guide/database/configuration.html @@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ for the primary connection, but it too can be renamed to something more relevant <li><strong>char_set</strong> - The character set used in communicating with the database.</li> <li><strong>dbcollat</strong> - The character collation used in communicating with the database.</li> <li><strong>swap_pre</strong> - A default table prefix that should be swapped with <var>dbprefix</var>. This is useful for distributed applications where you might run manually written queries, and need the prefix to still be customizable by the end user.</li> -<li><strong>autoinit</strong> - Whether or not to automatically initialize the database.</li> +<li><strong>autoinit</strong> - Whether or not to automatically connect to the database when the library loads. If set to false, the connection will take place prior to executing the first query.</li> <li><strong>stricton</strong> - TRUE/FALSE (boolean) - Whether to force "Strict Mode" connections, good for ensuring strict SQL while developing an application.</li> <li><strong>port</strong> - The database port number. To use this value you have to add a line to the database config array.<code>$db['default']['port'] = 5432;</code> </ul> diff --git a/user_guide/database/results.html b/user_guide/database/results.html index 75cb190f9..e9a5cb4cf 100644 --- a/user_guide/database/results.html +++ b/user_guide/database/results.html @@ -98,6 +98,18 @@ Query Results } </code> + <p>You can also pass a string to result() which represents a class to instantiate for each result object (note: this class must be loaded)</p> + + <code> + $query = $this->db->query("SELECT * FROM users;");<br /> + <br /> + foreach ($query->result('User') as $user)<br /> + {<br /> + echo $row->name; // call attributes<br /> + echo $row->reverse_name(); // or methods defined on the 'User' class<br /> + } + </code> + <h2>result_array()</h2> <p>This function returns the query result as a pure array, or an empty array when no result is produced. Typically you'll use this in a foreach loop, like this:</p> @@ -133,6 +145,15 @@ Query Results <code>$row = $query->row(<dfn>5</dfn>);</code> + <p>You can also add a second String parameter, which is the name of a class to instantiate the row with:</p> + + <code> + $query = $this->db->query("SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 1;");<br /> + <br /> + $query->row(0, 'User')<br /> + echo $row->name; // call attributes<br /> + echo $row->reverse_name(); // or methods defined on the 'User' class<br /> + </code> <h2>row_array()</h2> @@ -235,4 +256,4 @@ Next Topic: <a href="helpers.html">Query Helper Functions</a> </div> </body> -</html>
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