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Sorry if this question may seem easy to some but i cannot seem to figure it out. i was told that i could come here because the guys here are very helpful. i am having problem with the following code. when the uid is call into the url for example page.php?uid=5 i get "some code" if i do page.php?uid=letters i get redirected to page.php?uid=1. that works fine. but if a user should enter page.php?uid=1letters i get this error..Unknown column '1gh' in 'where clause'

Warning: mysql_fetch_array() expects parameter 1 to be resource, boolean given in C:\wamp\www\page.php on line 173.

i only get this error if the user enters unwanted characters at the end of get url id. How can i prevent this from happen how can i have it redirect to page.php?uid=1... see code below

$id = mysql_real_escape_string(@$_GET['uid']);

$query = mysql_query("SELECT user.* FROM user WHERE id = '$id'");

if ((mysql_num_rows($query)==0)) {
    header("location:page.php?uid=1");
    die();
}
else {
    while($rows = mysql_fetch_array($query)){
        $foo = $row['foo'];

        echo "some code";
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  • 1
    Why are you using an @ symbol in your $_GET request? Why not just: $id = mysql_real_escape_string($_GET['uid']); Just curious...
    – Eli
    Feb 16, 2011 at 1:32
  • Bad attempt at supressing errors/warnings if the 'uid' parameter isn't in the query.
    – Marc B
    Feb 16, 2011 at 1:43

1 Answer 1

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mysql_query returns false on error. You should check what it returns:

$query = "SELECT user.* FROM user WHERE id = '$id'"
$result = mysql_query($query);

if ($result === false) {
    die($query.'<br/>'.mysql_error());
}

Then you can understand why it failed. I've added the query to the die() statement so you can try the query manually as well.

The error given is unknown column of a string, which suggests you are not enclosing the value with single quotes in the SQL query, even though the code in the question does.

In production you should be taking all steps you can to ensure errors are handled gracefully. In this case you will probably want the same behaviour as not finding a user:

header("location:page.php?uid=1");
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  • Good suggestion but exiting the process due to a bad query (where the bad part most likely comes from user input) is the wrong approach to handling the error
    – Phil
    Feb 16, 2011 at 1:46
  • I'm not suggesting in production code... I'm suggesting to understand why it failed. Hence the last line. Will clarify it more in the answer.
    – Jacob
    Feb 16, 2011 at 1:48
  • @Jacob You still get the upvote for a good answer ;-). Given the error message "boolean given", I'd say you are entirely correct. FYI, my preference is to throw an exception.
    – Phil
    Feb 16, 2011 at 1:57
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    Your problem is you are passing in $id without surrounding it with single quotes, so it believes $id is a field (if it is a string). You should update your question to reflect the changes.
    – Jacob
    Feb 16, 2011 at 2:45
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    thank you jacob, i can't believe i didnt see that, why i say that, because i have a similar query to that one and i didnt get a error at that line because i had placed it in quotation. thanks alot
    – user618879
    Feb 16, 2011 at 3:14

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