If I have 5 rows in my mysql database with ids of 2, 4, 5, 6 and 8 and I echo out id 5 how do I then echo out the row number which of course would be row 3? I get row 3 by counting all the rows from the start of the database to the row I am after.
3 Answers
Try to use
SELECT @row_num:=@row_num+1 as row_number, id from table inner join (select @row_num:=0) as temp
$pdo = new PDO(....);
$result = $pdo->query($sql)->fetchAll();
foreach($result as $row) {
print_r($row);
}
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+1 You can also use a UNION instead of a JOIN to initialize the variable - handy if you want to avoid the overhead of a join:
SELECT NULL AS row_num, NULL AS id FROM dual WHERE (@row_num := 0) UNION ...
The WHERE produces an Impossible WHERE, so it doesn't return any rows, but it does initialize the variable.– MikeAug 22, 2011 at 21:04 -
Ok, I've been using php for about a year so I know quite a bit but never have I come across a query like this. How exactly are you suppose to echo it out?– Martin LAug 22, 2011 at 21:06
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@Martin L:
@row_num
is a user-defined variable. It's handy for producing dynamic values in a query. If you doSELECT @row_num:=@row_num+1 AS row_num
, thenrow_num
will be returned as one of the columns in your query - just like a real column.– MikeAug 22, 2011 at 21:09
The correct solution would be to add some auto_increment key to your table, then each row would have assigned a sequential number. Otherwise you are not guaranteed to get the same number for each id because SQL query without ORDER BY
clause is not guaranteed to have any order (i.e. ids may be returned in random order).
Otherwise, the solution given by Andrej L is the correct one.
Couldn't you just count the number of rows before this in the sort order you're using?
COUNT(*) FROM table WHERE id < ?
In this case only rows with id 2 and 3 would count, so the result is 2. If you're using a 1-based index, add one to that and you have your answer.
count
. So what have you tried already?ORDER BY
clause doesn't guarantee any order.