Retro video games delivered to your door every month!
Click above to get retro games delivered to your door ever month!
PDOStatement->columnCount()

PDOStatement->columnCount()

(no version information, might be only in CVS)

PDOStatement->columnCount() --  Returns the number of columns in the result set

Description

class PDOStatement {

int columnCount ( void )

}

Use PDOStatement->columnCount() to return the number of columns in the result set represented by the PDOStatement object.

If the PDOStatement object was returned from PDO->query(), the column count is immediately available.

If the PDOStatement object was returned from PDO->prepare(), an accurate column count will not be available until you invoke PDOStatement->execute().

Return Values

Returns the number of columns in the result set represented by the PDOStatement object. If there is no result set, PDOStatement->columnCount() returns 0.

Examples

Example 1. Counting columns

This example demonstrates how PDOStatement->columnCount() operates with and without a result set.

<?php
$dbh = new PDO('odbc:sample', 'db2inst1', 'ibmdb2');

$sth = $dbh->prepare("SELECT name, colour FROM fruit");

/* Count the number of columns in the (non-existent) result set */
$colcount = $sth->columnCount();
print("Before execute(), result set has $colcount columns (should be 0)\n");

$sth->execute();

/* Count the number of columns in the result set */
$colcount = $sth->columnCount();
print("After execute(), result set has $colcount columns (should be 2)\n");

?>

The above example will output:

Before execute(), result set has 0 columns (should be 0)
After execute(), result set has 2 columns (should be 2)

See Also

PDO->prepare()
PDOStatement->execute()
PDOStatement->rowCount()