mysql_fetch_field() - 0
Returns the definition of one column of a result set as a
MYSQL_FIELD structure. Call this function
repeatedly to retrieve information about all columns in the
result set. mysql_fetch_field()
returns NULL when no more fields are left.MYSQL_FIELDmysql_fetch_field()mysql_fetch_field()NULLmysql_fetch_field() is reset to
return information about the first field each time you execute a
new SELECT query. The field
returned by mysql_fetch_field()
is also affected by calls to
mysql_field_seek().mysql_fetch_field()mysql_fetch_field()SELECTSELECTmysql_fetch_field()mysql_fetch_field()mysql_field_seek()mysql_field_seek()If you've called mysql_query()
to perform a SELECT on a table
but have not called
mysql_store_result(), MySQL
returns the default blob length (8KB) if you call
mysql_fetch_field() to ask for
the length of a BLOB field. (The
8KB size is chosen because MySQL does not know the maximum
length for the BLOB. This should
be made configurable sometime.) Once you've retrieved the result
set, field->max_length contains the length
of the largest value for this column in the specific query.mysql_query()mysql_query()SELECTSELECTmysql_store_result()mysql_store_result()mysql_fetch_field()mysql_fetch_field()BLOBBLOBBLOBBLOBfield->max_length
Syntax
MYSQL_FIELD *mysql_fetch_field(MYSQL_RES
*result)
Example
MYSQL_FIELD *field;
while((field = mysql_fetch_field(result)))
{
printf("field name %s\n", field->name);
}
Output / Return Value
The MYSQL_FIELD structure for the current
column. NULL if no columns are left.MYSQL_FIELDNULL
Limitations
Alternatives / See Also
Reference