(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
pg_delete — Deletes records
$connection
,$table_name
,$conditions
,$flags
= PGSQL_DML_EXEC
pg_delete() deletes records from a table
specified by the keys and values in conditions
.
If flags
is specified,
pg_convert() is applied to
conditions
with the specified flags.
By default pg_delete() passes raw values.
Values must be escaped or the PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE
flag
must be specified in flags
.
PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE
quotes and escapes parameters/identifiers.
Therefore, table/column names become case sensitive.
Note that neither escape nor prepared query can protect LIKE query, JSON, Array, Regex, etc. These parameters should be handled according to their contexts. i.e. Escape/validate values.
connection
An PgSql\Connection instance.
table_name
Name of the table from which to delete rows.
conditions
An array whose keys are field names in the table table_name
,
and whose values are the values of those fields that are to be deleted.
flags
Any number of PGSQL_CONV_FORCE_NULL
,
PGSQL_DML_NO_CONV
,
PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE
,
PGSQL_DML_EXEC
,
PGSQL_DML_ASYNC
or
PGSQL_DML_STRING
combined. If PGSQL_DML_STRING
is part of the
flags
then query string is returned. When PGSQL_DML_NO_CONV
or PGSQL_DML_ESCAPE
is set, it does not call pg_convert() internally.
Returns true
on success or false
on failure. Returns string if PGSQL_DML_STRING
is passed
via flags
.
Version | Description |
---|---|
8.1.0 |
The connection parameter expects an PgSql\Connection
instance now; previously, a resource was expected.
|
Example #1 pg_delete() example
<?php
$db = pg_connect('dbname=foo');
// This is safe somewhat, since all values are escaped.
// However PostgreSQL supports JSON/Array. These are not
// safe by neither escape nor prepared query.
$res = pg_delete($db, 'post_log', $_POST, PG_DML_ESCAPE);
if ($res) {
echo "POST data is deleted: $res\n";
} else {
echo "User must have sent wrong inputs\n";
}
?>