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I need to reconcile between an existing set of tables and new/changed information that I get on a regular basis, and so have a set of ~30 UPDATE/INSERT operations that has to run every time. Since 'mysql_query' is now deprecated, and I'd prefer not to recode everything in OO, is there a reasonable procedural way to run all of these in sequence without having to call 'mysqli_free_result()' after every single one?

Just for the record, I've tried running them as a set of mysqli_query statements without mysqli_free_result(), and it's a mess: some of the operations go through while others fail silently. Frankly, a shell script with a bunch of 'mysql -e' commands in it was much more reliable... but this needs to be a Web-driven app, so that's not viable anymore.

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Your assumptions are wrong.

mysqli_query's behavior is similar to one of mysql_query and you don't need any other modifications. neither mysqli_free_result() is related to your problem.

the only meaningful part of your question is queries that fails silently. To make them fail noisily, just tell mysqli to do so. add this line before mysqli_connect

mysqli_report(MYSQLI_REPORT_ERROR | MYSQLI_REPORT_STRICT);

and the first query that fails will tell you the reason.

but in general, there is not a single problem with running multiple UPDATE and INSERT queries using mysqli_query().

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  • Thanks for both the education and the solution! That, plus not using multiple statements in a single query without mysqli_multi_query was the problem. Much appreciated! Sep 22, 2016 at 16:38

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