Short answer: I wanted this idea to be as short as 1 line of code:
$stmt = $PDO->query( "SELECT * FROM my_table" );
$rows = (int) $PDO->query('SELECT FOUND_ROWS()')->fetchColumn();
use SELECT FOUND_ROWS()
, then fetchColumn()
, then class it as an (int)
Dude below points out FOUND_ROWS()
is dep in MySQL8, but, how many sites are you managing on MySQL5.x right now?
Shortest possible copy/paste examples:
EXAMPLE 1 - COUNT(*) cast as (int) - not do stuff with rows
$rowCount = (int) $PDO->query( "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM my_table WHERE this='that' " )->fetchColumn();
EXAMPLE 2 - foreach()
count + do stuff with rows
$stmt = $PDO->query( "SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE this='that' " );
$rowCount = 0; foreach($stmt as $row) {$rowCount ++;}
EXAMPLE 3 - shorthand count of fetchAll()
+ do stuff with rows
$haystack = $PDO->prepare("SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE this=:that");
$haystack->execute($needles);
$rows = $haystack->fetchAll();
$rowCount = count($rows)>0 ? count($rows) : 0;
EXAMPLE 4 - where rowCount()
can be trusted: INSERT/UPDATE (but that's not a SELECT)
$update = $PDO->prepare("UPDATE my_table SET this=:that WHERE ID=:MYID");
$update->execute($execute);
$rowCount = $update->rowCount();
TLDR Version:
Since PHP8 I have just been using rowCount()
with impunity, no problems. Then when working on a stack of WP updates across other peoples servers I find rowCount()
failing to return the proper number of rows
Of course, I google it and find a decades long debate. I did not like most answers, so I read the documentation https://www.php.net/manual/en/pdostatement.rowcount.php
According to docs DELETE
, INSERT
, or UPDATE
work with
rowCount()
, but even on the PHP.NET examples page as far back as 11
years ago folks have been wrestling with the best/easiest way to just
count the result.
After testing about 20 answers (stackOverflow to Php.net) the final script [below] worked best to patch 32 WP sites across 20 different servers, 5 hosts and several versions of PHP ranging from 7.4 to 8.1 (GoDaddy, Bluehost, WPengine, InMotion, Amazon AWS Lightsail)
- WP Engine was always using MySQL 5.7
- Typically Amazon AWS Lightsail was also using MySQL 5.7
- Other Amazon AWS configs and shared hosts (GoDaddy, BH, Gator) all seem to be on standard PHP Drivers for MySQL (mysqli, ext/mysqli, PDO_MYSQL, PHP_MYSQLND)
Note that $opts
turned out to be important (shared, cloud, dedicated)
$db_host = "localhost"; //DB_HOST in WP
$db_name = "yours"; //DB_NAME in WP
$db_charset = "utf8mb4";//usually
$dsn = "mysql:host=$db_host;dbname=$db_name;charset=$db_charset";
$opt = [
PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION,
PDO::ATTR_DEFAULT_FETCH_MODE => PDO::FETCH_ASSOC,
PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES => false,
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_LOCAL_INFILE => true,
// on/off based on your need: https://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.pdo-mysql.php
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_USE_BUFFERED_QUERY => true
//makes sure addons like counting rows is enabled
];
$PDO = new PDO($dsn, $db_user, $db_password, $opt);
// Run the Jewels - do your stuff here
$stmt = $PDO->query( "SELECT * FROM wp_posts WHERE post_status='publish' " );
// one-line count, no shenanagans
$rows = (int) $PDO->query('SELECT FOUND_ROWS()')->fetchColumn();
echo "tell me something useful: $rows";
It should also be noted that this has some merit, but ONLY if your table is MYISAM. I mention this because most of the MySQL DB's I've been working with are WordPress and they are all running InnoDB, which doesn't give you an accurate row count for STATUS
$sth = $PDO->query("SHOW TABLE STATUS LIKE my_table");
$dbstatus = $sth->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
print_r($dbstatus);
/* dbstatus[Engine] => InnoDB
- if its InnoDB you can not trust the count
- use MYISAM for correct rowcount
dbstatus[Rows] => 51
dbstatus[Avg_row_length] => 321
dbstatus[Data_length] => 16384
*/
// theoretically, you now have this, only trust MYISAM, InnoDB will lie to you
$rowcount = $dbstatus['Rows'];
in closing, I think it would be great if rowCount()
always consistently worked across SELECT, UPDATE, INSERT, but it turns out IRL: it doesn't...
if you're in a situation where you need to patch some table across multiple websites, multiple hosts, multiple configs, and you need a reliable "count" when selecting, then updating, then inserting and you noticed that rowCount()
seems to be lying to you? then this is the page to be on, and at least one of these solutions here should do the trick... probably going to be different for a lot of folks.
in my case I just needed to "touch the table" and see how many rows were affected by a particular problem. I just wanted a count, a simple copy paste script that lets me SELECT X tell me "how many". I wanted to do that in stack workflow in PHP.
Now, lets dress up a real world scenario: Consider a World City Population Database with 4 million unique cities and towns from every country in the world deployed across 32 websites and 3 countries, all with different rules for how they want to use that data, an AJAX updating tool, no API and the need to allow each site owner to search, check, update data based on their own criteria and decision to import CSV data.
THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS
EXAMPLE 1 - COUNT(*)
then cast as (int)
//JUST GIVE ME SOME TOTALS: Ok, then COUNT(*) cast as (int)
// in this scenario I just want a number
// I trust my WHERE clause and do not need to do stuff
$rowCount = (int) $PDO->query("
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM world_cities WHERE incorporated='TRUE' ")->fetchColumn();
echo $rowCount." are incorporated"; //simple, it was cast as (int)
EXAMPLE 2 - foreach()
count
//GIVE ME TOTALS AND LET ME DO STUFF:
// in this scenario I want a number
// and I want to do stuff with rows
// and I trust my WHERE clause
$stmt = $PDO->query( "
SELECT *
FROM world_cities WHERE incorporated='TRUE' " );
$rowCount = 0;
foreach($stmt as $row) {$rowCount ++;} //do stuff in there
echo $rowCount." need to be updated"; //great
//note: count($stmt) notwork, $stmt is a PDOobject not an array
EXAMPLE 3 - shorthand count of fetchAll()
//GIVE ME TOTALS AND LET ME DO STUFF BUT WITH UNTRUSTED DATA:
// in this scenario I want a number
// and I want to do stuff with rows
// but I do not trust the WHERE clause
$user_search = $_POST['user_search']; //clean that
$inc_search = $_POST['inc_search']; //clean that
$needles = array(
'user_search' => $user_search,
'inc_search' => $inc_search
);
$haystack = $PDO->prepare("
SELECT * FROM world_cities
WHERE city_name=:user_search AND incorporated=:inc_search");
// execute, fetch, count
$haystack->execute($needles);
$rows = $haystack->fetchAll();
$rowCount = count($rows)>0 ? count($rows) : 0;
echo $rowCount." matched your search";
EXAMPLE 4 - the one and only case where rowCount()
worked well, consistently
//GIVE ME TOTALS AFTER I UPDATE RECORDS
// in this scenario I want a number
// and I want to push data in
try {
$execute = array(
'PKEY_ID' => 938572,
'NEW_STATUS' => 'FALSE',
'NEW_POPULATION' => '9285'
);
$update = $PDO->prepare("
UPDATE world_cities
SET
incorporated=:NEW_STATUS,
population=:NEW_POPULATION
WHERE PKEY_ID=:PKEY_ID ");
$update->execute($execute);
$update_rowCount = $update->rowCount();
if($update_rowCount == 0){
//eh, why?
print_r($execute);
}else {
echo $update_rowCount." records have been updated";
}
} catch (PDOException $e) {
// yuk, do tell...
echo $e->getMessage();
}
In ALL scenarios, at the end, I just want "a total" to push up into the AJAX layer, or, at least to echo and tell me 'how many'.