One approach I recommend for this is the use of a prepared statement through the mysqli
extension. To quote on the main advantage:
The actual purpose to use a prepared
statement in sql is to cut the cost of
processing queries; NOT to separate
data from query. That's how it's being
used w/ php NOW, not how it was
designed to be used in the first
place. With SQL you cut the cost of
executing multiple similar queries
down by using a prepared statement..
Doing so cuts out the parsing,
validation and most often generates an
execution plan for said query up
front. Which is why they run faster in
a loop, than their IMMEDIATE Query
cousins do.
Source: https://www.php.net/manual/en/mysqli.prepare.php#103730
To give an example on how you can utilize this:
$mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "world");
/* check connection */
if (mysqli_connect_errno()) {
printf("Connect failed: %s\n", mysqli_connect_error());
exit();
}
if ($stmt = $mysqli->prepare("INSERT INTO `images` (`location`, `size`, `othervalues`) VALUES(?, ?, ?)")) {
foreach($images as $image) {
// s = string value
// i = integer value
$stmt->bind_param("sis", $image['location'], $image['size'], $image['othervalues']);
$stmt->execute();
}
$stmt->close();
}
// Your prepared statement failed, handle the error
else {
}
$mysqli->close();
I'd recommend reading up on mysqli::prepare and mysqli_stmt::bind_param for more information on how the process works. I also recommend reading up on prepared statements in the MySQL documentation.