@EliteGamer here's how I use my functions I linked.
$params = [':item' => $item];
$query = "SELECT * FROM myTable WHERE id=:item";
$data = $this->db->exec($query, $params)[0];
@EliteGamer so, so, so many people that make the arguments you're making and continue not using prepared statements end up with stolen private information or deleted/modified tables.
@hakrehehe thanks, but @DaveRandom solved it, I wanted to make a mechanism where my app should throw a call when the app is accessed, if the user is not having license, than he should be warned to buy the app, but as I searched in the morning and Dave told me, I need to use Ioncube
@EliteGamer because if you dont sanitize your input and dont use prepared statements you are effectively allowing people to modify your queries as they see fit.
@Mr.Alien What I said is that you can't do it without something like ZendGuard or IonCube or <insert others that I forget the names of here> but that it's not a recommended approach because it's still circumventable if you really want to, the room then descended in into a highly theoretical debate about how reversible PHP opcodes are, and the topic kind of fizzled out. But I don't recommend Ioncube or anything else, I recommend you charge for support instead
@EliteGamer , lemme see if I get what you are saying : "everyone else in this chat room is clueless and your SQL perfectly ok because of your superior skill and experience". Is this why you try to argue against EVERY DAMNED THING WE TELL YOU ?!?
@EliteGamer yes, ok. something like sprintf('SELECT foo where ID = %d', $_GET['id'])is secure, but if you already using an API that supports prepared statements, there is no point in not using prepared statements
One of the awesome things about this chat is that everything is recorded forever, so you don't end up in those "debates" like I regularly have with my other half where she asserts she said something that she didn't or vice versa and I have no way of proving it
@DaveRandom actually he don't know HTML also haha, but I doubt he will sell it further, my cms wil be basic, companies here find difficult to work with OS cms like joomla and all, its kinda tough to design the templates etc, so I am building something like an integrator which will consists of articles and blocks, and ofcourse some fancy admin stuff, god knws if I chnged my mind I'll throw that on git
Yay!!! Now, mind your manners and thank everyone in this room for putting up with your stubbornness as we save you from losing/leaking your database tables!
@EliteGamer PDO and MySQLi both support prepared statements. All we are trying to tell you is that you are much better off using prepared statements, than with sanitizing your data alone. You might miss something when doing so. And prepared statements are a great and easy way to make your queries more secure.
@EliteGamer also take into account that if you need to run a lot of queries that just differ in their parameters, prepared statements, especially server-side prepared statements, can speed up the querying because you will only send the parameters then and mysql will not have to reparse the statement each time.
in any case, if you are just using mail() to send the email you have no guarantee whatsoever that it got send when it returns true. all mail does is deliver the mail to the mail transporter installed on the system
so if you enable mail.log and it says the mail was sent and it doesn't arrive, then there might something wrong with sendmail or whatever is configured
array (size=2)
0 =>
object(stdClass)[4649]
public 'groupValue' => string '2' (length=1)
public 'doclist' =>
object(stdClass)[4650]
public 'numFound' => int 1
public 'start' => int 0
public 'maxScore' => float 1.746151
public 'docs' =>
array (size=1)
...
1 =>
object(stdClass)[4652]
public 'groupValue' => string '3' (length=1)
public 'doclist' =>
object(stdClass)[4653]
public 'numFound' => int 4
foreach($response as $key=>$value) will not give you doclist in $value. It gives you the objects in the array. you then need to get the doclist docs from those objects
@user2475624 so in your case the $value will be the object(stdClass)[4649] from your dump. All you need to do then is to fetch the doclist and the doc properties
@Gordon and do you have some helper class through which you work with files uploaded? Also do you need to store keys to know the position of the file info in $_FILES array?
Hey, i got a downvote on my solution for this q. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18065289/mysqli-num-rows-returns-1-no-matter-what/18065425#18065425 I might have offered some bad advice, not sure. Can anyone hint me what made it worth a downvote?