mssql_result() returns the contents of one cell from a MS SQL result set.
The result resource that is being evaluated. This result comes from a call to mssql_query().
The row number.
Can be the field's offset, the field's name or the field's table dot field's name (tablename.fieldname). If the column name has been aliased ('select foo as bar from...'), it uses the alias instead of the column name.
Note:
Specifying a numeric offset for the
field
argument is much quicker than specifying a fieldname or tablename.fieldname argument.
Returns the contents of the specified cell.
When working on large result sets, you should consider using one of the functions that fetch an entire row (specified below). As these functions return the contents of multiple cells in one function call, they're MUCH quicker than mssql_result().
<?php // Send a select query to MSSQL $query = mssql_query('SELECT [username] FROM [php].[dbo].[userlist]'); // Check if there were any records if (!mssql_num_rows($query)) { echo 'No records found'; } else { for ($i = 0; $i < mssql_num_rows($query); ++$i) { echo mssql_result($query, $i, 'username'), PHP_EOL; } } // Free the query result mssql_free_result($query); ?>
The above example will output something similar to:
Kalle Felipe Emil Ross
<?php // Send a select query to MSSQL $query = mssql_query('SELECT [username] FROM [php].[dbo].[userlist]'); // Check if there were any records if (!mssql_num_rows($query)) { echo 'No records found'; } else { while ($row = mssql_fetch_array($query)) { echo $row['username'], PHP_EOL; } } // Free the query result mssql_free_result($query); ?>
Please login to continue.