I have searched the net and so far what I have seen is that you can use mysql_
and mysqli_
together meaning:
<?php
$con=mysqli_connect("localhost", "root" ,"" ,"mysql");
if( mysqli_connect_errno( $con ) ) {
echo "failed to connect";
}else{
echo "connected";
}
mysql_close($con);
echo "Done";
?>
or
<?php
$con=mysql_connect("localhost", "root" ,"" ,"mysql");
if( mysqli_connect_errno( $con ) ) {
echo "failed to connect";
}else{
echo "connected";
}
mysqli_close($con);
echo "Done";
?>
Are valid but when I use this code what I get is:
Connected
Warning: mysql_close() expects parameter 1 to be resource, object given in D:\************.php on line 9
Done
For the first and the same except with mysqli_close()
. For the second one.
What is the problem? Can't I use mysql_
and mysqli
together? Or is it normal? Is the way I can check if the connections are valid at all? (the if(mysq...)
)
mysql_*
functions altogether. They're error-prone and unsafe, and they will be removed from PHP soon (they're marked as deprecated at the moment). [This great answer][0] goes into way more detail explaining why they are bad. [0]:stackoverflow.com/a/12860046/1055295mysqli_*
functions and good code withmysql_*
ones. But the latter category is marked as deprecated since it's the inferior set of functions, not being able to support OO-style invocations or even prepared statements (to name just two examples). Given a choice of two tools to do the same job, one of which is clearly better in the long run and more flexible, isn't the correct answer obvious?