I hope this question does not seem vague but I am converting the old mysql statements to the PDO prepared statements and I have searched but cannot find the answer to this. What is the equivalent of $count=mysql_num_rows($stmt);
in PDO? I have included my code so you can see what I am doing but basically I am creating a login page for users I have a PDO statement using SELECT
to search the database for a matching username and password row. If it comes up with one then it will increase the $count
variable to one so that my IF
statment is true.
CHECK_LOGIN.PHP
<?php
require 'functions.php';
require 'DB.php';
ob_start();
// Define $myusername and $mypassword
$myusername=$_POST['myusername'];
$mypassword =$_POST['mypassword'];
$mypassword = md5($_POST['mypassword']);
checkLogin($conn,$myusername,$mypassword,$stmt);
// Mysql_num_row is counting table row
$count=mysql_num_rows($stmt);
// If result matched $myusername and $mypassword, table row must be 1 row
if($count==1){
// Register $myusername, $mypassword and redirect to file "login_success.php"
session_start();
$_SESSION['myusername'] = $myusername;
session_is_registered("myusername");
session_is_registered("mypassword");
$myusername1 = $_SESSION['myusername'];
//UPDATE LAST LOGIN IN DATABASE
date_default_timezone_set('America/Chicago');
$last_login = date('m/d/Y h:i:s a', time());
lastLogin($conn,$myusername1,$last_login);
header("location:form.php");
}
else {
echo "Wrong Username or Password";
}
ob_end_flush();
?>
function in FUNCTION.PHP
function checkLogin($conn,$myusername,$mypassword,$stmt){
$myusername = stripslashes($myusername);
$myusername = mysql_real_escape_string($myusername);
$stmt = $conn->prepare('SELECT * FROM `CLL_users` WHERE `user_name`=:myusername AND `password`=:mypassword');
$stmt->execute(array(':myusername' => $myusername, ':mypassword' => $mypassword));
}
Check example #2 from here: PDOStatement::rowCount
For most databases, PDOStatement::rowCount() does not return the number of rows affected by a SELECT statement. Instead, use PDO::query() to issue a SELECT COUNT(*) statement with the same predicates as your intended SELECT statement, then use PDOStatement::fetchColumn() to retrieve the number of rows that will be returned. Your application can then perform the correct action.
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