(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
odbc_columns — Lists the column names in specified tables
$odbc,$catalog = null,$schema = null,$table = null,$column = nullLists all columns in the requested range.
odbcThe ODBC connection object, see odbc_connect() for details.
catalogThe catalog ('qualifier' in ODBC 2 parlance).
schema
The schema ('owner' in ODBC 2 parlance).
This parameter accepts the following search patterns:
% to match zero or more characters,
and _ to match a single character.
table
The table name.
This parameter accepts the following search patterns:
% to match zero or more characters,
and _ to match a single character.
column
The column name.
This parameter accepts the following search patterns:
% to match zero or more characters,
and _ to match a single character.
Returns an ODBC result object or false on failure.
The result set has the following columns:
TABLE_CATTABLE_SCHEMTABLE_NAMECOLUMN_NAMEDATA_TYPETYPE_NAMECOLUMN_SIZEBUFFER_LENGTHDECIMAL_DIGITSNUM_PREC_RADIXNULLABLEREMARKSCOLUMN_DEFSQL_DATA_TYPESQL_DATETIME_SUBCHAR_OCTET_LENGTHORDINAL_POSITIONIS_NULLABLE
The result set is ordered by TABLE_CAT, TABLE_SCHEM,
TABLE_NAME and ORDINAL_POSITION.
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 8.4.0 |
odbc expects an Odbc\Connection
instance now; previously, a resource was expected.
|
| 8.0.0 |
schema, table and column
are now nullable.
|
Example #1 List Columns of a Table
<?php
$conn = odbc_connect($dsn, $user, $pass);
$columns = odbc_columns($conn, 'TutorialDB', 'dbo', 'test', '%');
while (($row = odbc_fetch_array($columns))) {
print_r($row);
break; // further rows omitted for brevity
}
?>The above example will output something similar to:
Array
(
[TABLE_CAT] => TutorialDB
[TABLE_SCHEM] => dbo
[TABLE_NAME] => TEST
[COLUMN_NAME] => id
[DATA_TYPE] => 4
[TYPE_NAME] => int
[COLUMN_SIZE] => 10
[BUFFER_LENGTH] => 4
[DECIMAL_DIGITS] => 0
[NUM_PREC_RADIX] => 10
[NULLABLE] => 0
[REMARKS] =>
[COLUMN_DEF] =>
[SQL_DATA_TYPE] => 4
[SQL_DATETIME_SUB] =>
[CHAR_OCTET_LENGTH] =>
[ORDINAL_POSITION] => 1
[IS_NULLABLE] => NO
)