8

I have query like this:

SELECT imageurl 
FROM entries 
WHERE thumbdl IS NULL 
LIMIT 10;

It works perfectly with PDO and MySQL Workbench (it returns 10 urls as I want).

However I tried to parametrize LIMIT with PDO:

$cnt = 10;
$query = $this->link->prepare("
             SELECT imageurl 
             FROM entries 
             WHERE imgdl is null 
             LIMIT ?
         ");

$query->bindValue(1, $cnt);

$query->execute();

$result = $query->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);

That returns empty array.

0

2 Answers 2

22

I just tested a bunch of cases. I'm using PHP 5.3.15 on OS X, and querying MySQL 5.6.12.

Any combination works if you set:

$dbh->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false);

All of the following work: you can use either an int or a string; you don't need to use PDO::PARAM_INT.

$stmt = $dbh->prepare("select user from mysql.user limit ?");

$int = intval(1);
$int = '1';

$stmt->bindValue(1, 1);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindValue(1, '1');
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindValue(1, 1, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindValue(1, '1', PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindParam(1, $int);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindParam(1, $string);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindParam(1, $int, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindParam(1, $string, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

You can also forget about bindValue() or bindParam(), and instead pass either an int or a string in an array argument to execute(). This works fine and does the same thing, but using an array is simpler and often more convenient to code.

$stmt = $dbh->prepare("select user from mysql.user limit ?");

$stmt->execute(array($int));
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->execute(array($string));
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

If you enable emulated prepares, only one combination works: you must use an integer as the parameter and you must specify PDO::PARAM_INT:

$dbh->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, true);

$stmt = $dbh->prepare("select user from mysql.user limit ?");

$stmt->bindValue(1, $int, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

$stmt->bindParam(1, $int, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
print_r($stmt->fetchAll());

Passing values to execute() doesn't work if you have emulated prepares enabled.

2
  • i am another downvoter. I downvoted because of: "You can also forget about bindValue() or bindParam(), and instead pass either an int or a string in an array argument to execute(). This works fine, as long as emulated prepares is disabled." The power of prepared statements is about binding! With binding habbit you justcan't never forget escaping or casting. And yes, sometimes you need some extra code to get it working. But: safety first!
    – Terradon
    Oct 11, 2015 at 14:26
  • @Terradon, Thanks for at least admitting to the downvote and explaining your reason. But your reason is incorrect. Yes, binding parameters is important, and binding is what happens in all three cases: bindValue(), bindParam() or pass the parameters as an array to execute(). And in all three cases, binding does not happen if you have PDO configured to use emulated prepares. Oct 11, 2015 at 16:58
10

By default bindValue binds a string value but limit is an integer, so use PDO::PARAM_INT

$query->bindValue(1, $cnt, PDO::PARAM_INT);
2
  • This one helped me:)
    – Terradon
    Oct 11, 2015 at 14:27
  • Hello Musa, how you going? I got one similar question about PDO Limit Placeholders, is it possible to use the named placeholder to Limit inside the execute? stackoverflow.com/questions/72081221/…
    – Sophie
    May 2, 2022 at 5:42

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