for ($key = dba_firstkey($this->handle); $key !== false; $key = dba_nextkey($this->handle)) {
$keyset[] = $key;
} // end for
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
dba_firstkey — Fetch first key
dba_firstkey() returns the first key of the database and resets the internal key pointer. This permits a linear search through the whole database.
Returns the key on success or false
on failure.
Version | Description |
---|---|
8.4.0 |
The dba parameter expects a Dba\Connection
instance now; previously, a valid dba resource was expected.
|
for ($key = dba_firstkey($this->handle); $key !== false; $key = dba_nextkey($this->handle)) {
$keyset[] = $key;
} // end for
I wondered why it wasn't already written, so I did because I think working with associative arrays is always as comfortable as can be
<?php
function dba_fetch_assoc($handle) {
$assoc = array();
for($k = dba_firstkey($handle); $k != false; $k = dba_nextkey($handle)) {
$assoc[$k] = dba_fetch($k, $handle);
}
return $assoc;
}
?>
Looks like Jacky is using some DB object? I don't know if it's native to PHP or written on it's own... Anyways this is what I use:
$DBCon = dba_open("/tmp/test_db.db2", "r", "db2") or die("Uh oh, can't open the database :(");
if ($the_key = dba_firstkey($DBCon)) do {
print("Key: $the_key Value:");
print dba_fetch($the_key, $DBCon);
print("<BR>");
} while ($the_key = dba_nextkey($DBCon));
print ("<BR><BR><BR>Well looks like we're done here :-)");