41

Suppose I have this table:

id | name | city
------------------
1  | n1   | c1
2  | n2   | c2
3  | n3   | c3
4  | n4   | c4

I want to check if the value c7 exists under the variable city or not.

If it does, I will do something.
If it doesn't, I will do something else.

10 Answers 10

75

using modern MySQLi:

$mysqli = new mysqli(SERVER, DBUSER, DBPASS, DATABASE);

$city = 'c7';
$result = $mysqli->execute_query("SELECT id FROM mytable WHERE city = ? LIMIT 1", [$city]);
if($result->num_rows == 1) {
    // found
}

using legacy mysqli

$mysqli = new mysqli(SERVER, DBUSER, DBPASS, DATABASE);

$city = 'c7';
$stmt = $mysqli->prepare("SELECT id FROM mytable WHERE city = ? LIMIT 1");
$stmt->bind_param("s", $city);
$stmt->execute();
$result = $stmt->get_result();
if($result->num_rows == 1) {
    // found
}

using PDO:

$pdo = new PDO($dsn, $user, $pass, $options);

$city = 'c7';
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT id FROM mytable WHERE city = ? LIMIT 1");
$stmt->execute([$city]);
if($stmt->rowCount() == 1) {
    // found
}
3
18

For Exact Match

"SELECT * FROM yourTable WHERE city = 'c7'"

For Pattern / Wildcard Search

"SELECT * FROM yourTable WHERE city LIKE '%c7%'"

Of course you can change '%c7%' to '%c7' or 'c7%' depending on how you want to search it. For exact match, use first query example.

PHP

$result = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM yourTable WHERE city = 'c7'");
$matchFound = mysql_num_rows($result) > 0 ? 'yes' : 'no';
echo $matchFound;

You can also use if condition there.

1
  • 2
    Use id instead of * (star). And PDO or MYSQLi should be used.
    – Jo Smo
    Commented Jul 5, 2014 at 16:13
2

This works for me :


$db = mysqli_connect('localhost', 'UserName', 'Password', 'DB_Name') or die('Not Connected');
mysqli_set_charset($db, 'utf8');

$sql = mysqli_query($db,"SELECT * FROM `mytable` WHERE city='c7'");
$sql = mysqli_fetch_assoc($sql);
$Checker = $sql['city'];

if  ($Checker != null) {
    
    echo 'Already exists';
    
} else {

    echo 'Not found';
}

2

use

select count(city) from mytable where city = 'c7'

This will send only a single value from the query. If it is 0 it is not present else it is present. Since you will not be use the other column values.

0
SELECT
    IF city='C7'
    THEN city
    ELSE 'somethingelse'
    END as `city`
FROM `table` WHERE `city` = 'c7'
0
0

I tried to d this for a while and $sqlcommand = 'SELECT * FROM database WHERE search="'.$searchString.'";';
$sth = $db->prepare($sqlcommand); $sth->execute(); $record = $sth->fetch(); if ($sth->fetchColumn() > 0){}
just works if there are TWO identical entries, but, if you replace if ($sth->fetchColumn() > 0){} with if ($result){} it works with only one matching record, hope this helps.

0

Assuming the connection is established and is available in global scope;

//Check if a value exists in a table
function record_exists ($table, $column, $value) {
    global $connection;
    $query = "SELECT * FROM {$table} WHERE {$column} = {$value}";
    $result = mysql_query ( $query, $connection );
    if ( mysql_num_rows ( $result ) ) {
        return TRUE;
    } else {
        return FALSE;
    }
}

Usage: Assuming that the value to be checked is stored in the variable $username;

if (record_exists ( 'employee', 'username', $username )){
    echo "Username is not available. Try something else.";
} else {
    echo "Username is available";
}
-1

For Matching the ID:

Select * from table_name where 1=1

For Matching the Pattern:

Select * from table_name column_name Like '%string%'
-1

$result = mysqli_query($conn, "SELECT * FROM WHERE = ''"; $found = mysqli_num_rows($result) > 0 ? 'Yes' : 'no' ; echo $found;

1
  • 2
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Commented Mar 21, 2022 at 8:55
-1

Here's is what worked with me if you're using PHP Version 8

$result = mysqli_query(database name, "SELECT id FROM mytable WHERE city = 'c7'");      
  
  if(mysqli_num_rows($result) == 0) {
       // Do Something 
  }
  else {
      // Do something else 
  }

The difference with my answer and Reindeer Wit is the 'i' in mysqli_query and mysqli_num_rows()

Also including the name of the database name inside of mysqli_query() that you are using.

2
  • 1
    "I figured that Reinder Wit answer is a bit outdated" — It isn't. It has two sections. The first section is marked preferred and is supported from PHP 5 onwards. You were trying to follow the section marked deprecated which is not supported since PHP 7.
    – Quentin
    Commented Oct 8, 2022 at 21:43
  • @Quentin I understand Commented Nov 4, 2024 at 3:53

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