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I'd like to take data from a field which is a string of words separated by commas and save each of those words to a variable. After which, I'd like to take the stored words and use them to retrieve information.

An example of this would be a field containing the information: "Bob,Sue,Adam,Tim,Hank" My goal is to select each name, using the commas to detect each different name, and save each name to a variable or, more efficiently, an array, then use a "for" command or similar to display relevant info about each person.

I'm using MySQLi commands, which I have been told are poorly documented; however, that is what my book instructed me to use.

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    A field should never contain "Bob,Sue,Adam,Tim,Hank". This should be 5 rows in a child table.
    – gbn
    Nov 25, 2011 at 11:28

5 Answers 5

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You can use find_in_set in MySQL:

assume mysql field "username" has these values : "Bob,Sue,Adam,Tim,Hank"

$name="bob";

QUERY is

  select * from TABLE_NAME where FIND_IN_SET('$name', username);
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    That's cool! :-) I didn't know about this function. Even so, I believe a different table design would be more robust in the long run.
    – mhelvens
    Nov 25, 2011 at 12:15
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The explode function the other answers suggest will work fine, but it would be more elegant if you stored these names separately in a second table.

So, where you now have:

  • main: id, names

I suggest:

  • main: id
  • names: main_id, name

You can then retrieve the names belonging to one row with a query such as:

SELECT name FROM names WHERE id = $id

To add a name belonging to a certain id, use:

INSERT INTO TABLE names (main_id, name) VALUES ($id, "$newname")
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  • Ok. I apologize for my confusion. I have to create a working friends list. A user would visit a profile and click "add." This would add that clicking users name to the clickee's "friends" field with a comma separator. Would your method work with something such as that?
    – Brandon. G
    Nov 25, 2011 at 11:37
  • The separate tables approach would make your use-case easier. You just add a name to the names table (see expanded answer), whereas you would now have to retrieve the string, add a new comma-separated name, then replace the string in the database.
    – mhelvens
    Nov 25, 2011 at 11:39
  • Thank you for your replies. I'll attempt your method. I've done HTML and CSS before but PHP and MySQL are two different animals.
    – Brandon. G
    Nov 25, 2011 at 11:43
  • By the way, if this is a table of people who can be friends with each other, proper database design dictates you store a persons id (probably an integer) in the friend field rather than his/her name. Using the id, you can always find the name back, but using only the name, it's hard to find the other info. If not impossible: two people can have the same name!
    – mhelvens
    Nov 25, 2011 at 12:22
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  1. select the field
  2. $names = explode(',', $thefield);

You now have an array of the values

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$arrayList = explode(',', "Bob,Sue,Adam,Tim,Hank");

checkout http://php.net/manual/en/function.explode.php

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You want to EXPLODE !

For example:

$persons= explode(",", "Bob,Sue,Adam,Tim,Hank");

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