I'm struggling to understand how to get jQuery.ajax to interpret a failed MySQL UPDATE query as an error. Here's my code:
jQuery:
$.ajax({
type:'POST',
url:'/ajax/registration.php',
data:{formData: formData},
success:function(data){eformDef.forms.registration.success(data);},
error:function(data){eformDef.forms.registration.success(data);}
});
PHP
$data = $_POST['formData'];
$firstName = mysql_real_escape_string($data['first name']);
$lastName = mysql_real_escape_string($data['last name']);
$email = mysql_real_escape_string($data['email address']);
$password = mysql_real_escape_string($data['password']);
mysql_query("INSERT INTO users (first_name, last_name, email, password) VALUES ('$firstName', '$lastName', '$email', '$password')") or die(mysql_error());
No matter what--even if I make the mysql_query syntax invalid--the ajax call always interprets the response as a success. I assume that's because the mysql_error() gets sent back as the response, the ajax call reads that as a string, and apparently considers that to be a success. Of course I can deal with this by checking the response string in the $.ajax success function, but this seems a bit illogical. In cases where I can test for a data type using the $.ajax dataType option, this isn't an issue. But with an UPDATE query like the one above, I always get a string as a response.
Since there is a workaround (checking the string in the success function), this isn't a critical issue. But if there is a more correct way of doing this, I'd much prefer that.