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sqlite_last_error(3) [php man page]

SQLITE_LAST_ERROR(3)													      SQLITE_LAST_ERROR(3)

sqlite_last_error - Returns the error code of the last error for a database

SYNOPSIS
int sqlite_last_error (resource $dbhandle) DESCRIPTION
Object oriented style (method): int SQLiteDatabase::lastError (void ) Returns the error code from the last operation performed on $dbhandle (the database handle), or 0 when no error occurred. A human readable description of the error code can be retrieved using sqlite_error_string(3). PARAMETERS
o $dbhandle - The SQLite Database resource; returned from sqlite_open(3) when used procedurally. This parameter is not required when using the object-oriented method. RETURN VALUES
Returns an error code, or 0 if no error occurred. SEE ALSO
sqlite_error_string(3). PHP Documentation Group SQLITE_LAST_ERROR(3)

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SQLITE_EXEC(3)															    SQLITE_EXEC(3)

sqlite_exec - Executes a result-less query against a given database

SYNOPSIS
bool sqlite_exec (resource $dbhandle, string $query, [string &$error_msg]) DESCRIPTION
bool sqlite_exec (string $query, resource $dbhandle) Object oriented style (method): bool SQLiteDatabase::queryExec (string $query, [string &$error_msg]) Executes an SQL statement given by the $query against a given database handle (specified by the $dbhandle parameter). Warning SQLite will execute multiple queries separated by semicolons, so you can use it to execute a batch of SQL that you have loaded from a file or have embedded in a script. PARAMETERS
o $dbhandle - The SQLite Database resource; returned from sqlite_open(3) when used procedurally. This parameter is not required when using the object-oriented method. o $query - The query to be executed. Data inside the query should be properly escaped. o $error_msg - The specified variable will be filled if an error occurs. This is specially important because SQL syntax errors can't be fetched using the sqlite_last_error(3) function. Note Two alternative syntaxes are supported for compatibility with other database extensions (such as MySQL). The preferred form is the first, where the $dbhandle parameter is the first parameter to the function. RETURN VALUES
This function will return a boolean result; TRUE for success or FALSE for failure. If you need to run a query that returns rows, see sqlite_query(3). The column names returned by SQLITE_ASSOC and SQLITE_BOTH will be case-folded according to the value of the sqlite.assoc_case configuration option. CHANGELOG
+--------+---------------------------------+ |Version | | | | | | | Description | | | | +--------+---------------------------------+ | 5.1.0 | | | | | | | Added the $error_msg parameter | | | | +--------+---------------------------------+ EXAMPLES
Example #1 Procedural example <?php $dbhandle = sqlite_open('mysqlitedb'); $query = sqlite_exec($dbhandle, "UPDATE users SET email='jDoe@example.com' WHERE username='jDoe'", $error); if (!$query) { exit("Error in query: '$error'"); } else { echo 'Number of rows modified: ', sqlite_changes($dbhandle); } ?> Example #2 Object-oriented example <?php $dbhandle = new SQLiteDatabase('mysqlitedb'); $query = $dbhandle->queryExec("UPDATE users SET email='jDoe@example.com' WHERE username='jDoe'", $error); if (!$query) { exit("Error in query: '$error'"); } else { echo 'Number of rows modified: ', $dbhandle->changes(); } ?> SEE ALSO
sqlite_query(3), sqlite_unbuffered_query(3), sqlite_array_query(3). PHP Documentation Group SQLITE_EXEC(3)
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