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So i'm working on a university project but i have a problem that's really starting to bother me. I am trying to update my database several times with different values, except that only the last value will be taken into account : they're overwriting themselves.

My code :

$id_structure = $_POST['id_structure'];
foreach ($id_structure as $id2) {
      $id_structure = explode(",", $id2);
      updateDemandeStructure($id_demande[0], $id2, 0);
}

And my SQL method is like this :

function updateDemandeStructure($id_demande, $id_structure, $principale) {
    global $bd;
    $stmt = $bd->prepare('UPDATE demandes_structures SET id_structure = :id_structure, principale = :principale WHERE id_demande = :id_demande');
    $stmt->bindParam(ID_DEMANDE, $id_demande);
    $stmt->bindParam(ID_STRUCTURE, $id_structure);
    $stmt->bindParam(':principale', $principale);
    $stmt->execute();
}

So for example if I (id_demande = 1) choose 4 new structures with their id_structure : 22,23,24,25, I'm going to have my table who looks like :

ID_DEMANDE ID_STRUCTURE PRINCIPALE
1 25 0
1 25 0
1 25 0
1 25 0

Please does anyone know what to modify in my code so that my table looks like this after my update?

ID_DEMANDE ID_STRUCTURE PRINCIPALE
1 22 0
1 23 0
1 24 0
1 25 0

Thank you very much!

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    an UPDATE updates all eligible rows which match the criteria. It does not always update one row at a time. Therefore, each time you run the UPDATE, it will indeed overwrite the values in all rows which match the ID_DEMANDE value. If you want to put a different value in each row, you need some way of distinguishing between the rows so you can uniquely identify the specific row you want to change each time. From what you've posted so far, it's unclear to us how you might go about that, so it's hard to suggest anything meaningful. Does the table have any other columns?
    – ADyson
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:32
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    Or maybe if there's no other information you can use to help you, the alternative is simply to DELETE all rows which match the ID_DEMANDE and then INSERT new ones with the desired structure, because then you can control precisely what goes into each new row.
    – ADyson
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:33
  • Thanks for your answer, and no this table (demande_structures) has only 3 columns (id_demande, id_structure and principale).
    – elieeee
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:34
  • Ok well then I think you would just have to delete the existing rows and re-create them with the new values.
    – ADyson
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:35
  • @ADyson is wrong, in mysql and as far as i know every databse updates row by row, you you ca use a user define variable to update the number, which database are you using?
    – nbk
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:42

1 Answer 1

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Thanks for all of your answers, as I'm running out of time, I decided to choose @ADyson's solution :

Instead of doing like this :


foreach ($id_structure as $id2) {
      $id_structure = explode(",", $id2);
      updateDemandeStructure($id_demande[0], $id2, 0);
}

I did this :

deleteDemandeStructure($id_demande[0]);

foreach ($id_structure as $id2) {
      $id_structure = explode(",", $id2);
      addDemandeStructure($id_demande[0], $id2, 0);
}

I'll come back to you if I have time to set up a more dynamic version!

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