I am taking a course on LinkedIn Learning that is teaching me PHP and MySQL. Questions in the Q&A section don't usually get responded to so I was hoping I could find some help here.
In this course, I am making a multi-page website that accesses a MySQL DB. We have just created the DB and are now starting to build the components to connect to the DB. There is a db_credentials.php script that defines DB_SERVER
DB_USER
DB_PASS
DB_NAME
Then I also have a database.php script which is here
<?php
require_once('db_credentials.php');
function db_connect() {
$connection = mysqli_connect(DB_SERVER, DB_USER, DB_PASS, DB_NAME);
return $connection;
}
function db_disconnect($connection) {
if(isset($connection)) {
mysqli_close($connection);
}
}
?>
This all makes sense to me. I also have a script called initialize.php that is included in my header, therefore every page of the website. In this initialize.php script we just added the following snippet $db = db_connect();
Ok, that makes sense too. This way we can just put $db
in our code instead of typing out db_connect
(Am I right or are there other reasons why we would assign this function to this variable?)
Ok so here is the part I am struggling with. In our footer.php we are including code to close the DB connection if it is open so that we aren't using resources needlessly. The code in the footer is db_disconnect($db);
I just can't understand why we need the $db
argument. Wouldn't we be able to close the connection by just calling the db_disconnect
function without any arguments?
mysqli_close
, how would it know which one to close?$db = db_connect()
you're actually assigning the variable $db to the value that the function returns (and not to the function itself). Your function returns a database connection and so $db will contain this.