The following example executes a batch query that inserts into a table and
then selects from the table. This produces two results on the statement:
one for the rows affected by the INSERT and one for the rows returned by
the SELECT. To get to the rows returned by the SELECT,
sqlsrv_next_result() must be called to move past the first result.
<?php
$serverName = "serverName\sqlexpress";
$connectionInfo = array("Database"=>"dbName", "UID"=>"userName", "PWD"=>"password");
$conn = sqlsrv_connect( $serverName, $connectionInfo);
$query = "INSERT INTO Table_1 (id, data) VALUES (?,?); SELECT * FROM TABLE_1;";
$params = array(1, "some data");
$stmt = sqlsrv_query($conn, $query, $params);
// Consume the first result (rows affected by INSERT) without calling sqlsrv_next_result.
echo "Rows affected: ".sqlsrv_rows_affected($stmt)."<br />";
// Move to the next result and display results.
$next_result = sqlsrv_next_result($stmt);
if( $next_result ) {
while( $row = sqlsrv_fetch_array( $stmt, SQLSRV_FETCH_ASSOC)){
echo $row['id'].": ".$row['data']."<br />";
}
} elseif( is_null($next_result)) {
echo "No more results.<br />";
} else {
die(print_r(sqlsrv_errors(), true));
}
?>