mysqli_result data_seek() Method
The mysqli_result::data_seek() / mysqli_data_seek() function is used to adjust the result pointer to an arbitrary row specified by the offset in the result set.
Syntax
//Object-oriented style public mysqli_result::data_seek(offset) //Procedural style mysqli_data_seek(result, offset)
Parameters
result |
Required. For procedural style only: Specify a mysqli_result object returned by mysqli_query(), mysqli_store_result(), mysqli_use_result() or mysqli_stmt_get_result(). |
offset |
Required. Specify the field offset. It must be between zero and (total number of rows - 1). |
Return Value
Returns true on success or false on failure.
Example: Object-oriented style
The example below shows the usage of mysqli_result::data_seek() method.
<?php //establishing connection to the database $mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "user", "password", "database"); if ($mysqli->connect_errno) { echo "Failed to connect to MySQL: ". $mysqli->connect_error; exit(); } //getting query result from the database $sql = "SELECT Name, Age FROM Employee ORDER BY Age"; $result = $mysqli->query($sql); //seeking to row number 51 $result->data_seek(50); //fetching a single row $row = $result->fetch_row(); printf("Name: %s, Age: %d\n", $row[0], $row[1]); //closing the connection $mysqli->close(); ?>
The output of the above code will be similar to:
Name: John, Age: 28
Example: Procedural style
The example below shows the usage of mysqli_data_seek() function.
<?php //establishing connection to the database $mysqli = mysqli_connect("localhost", "user", "password", "database"); if (mysqli_connect_errno()) { echo "Failed to connect to MySQL: ". mysqli_connect_error(); exit(); } //getting query result from the database $sql = "SELECT Name, Age FROM Employee ORDER BY Age"; $result = mysqli_query($mysqli, $sql); //seeking to row number 51 mysqli_data_seek($result, 50); //fetching a single row $row = mysqli_fetch_row($result); printf("Name: %s, Age: %d\n", $row[0], $row[1]); //closing the connection mysqli_close($mysqli); ?>
The output of the above code will be similar to:
Name: John, Age: 28
Example: adjusting the result pointer when iterating
This function can be useful when iterating over the result set to impose a custom order or rewind the result set when iterating multiple times. Consider the example below:
<?php //establishing connection to the database $mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "user", "password", "database"); if ($mysqli->connect_errno) { echo "Failed to connect to MySQL: ". $mysqli->connect_error; exit(); } //getting query result from the database $sql = "SELECT Name, Age FROM Employee ORDER BY Age"; $result = $mysqli->query($sql); //iterating the result set in reverse order for ($row_no = $result->num_rows - 1; $row_no >= 0; $row_no--) { $result->data_seek($row_no); //fetching a single row $row = $result->fetch_row(); printf("Name: %s, Age: %d\n", $row[0], $row[1]); } //resetting pointer to the //beginning of the result set $result->data_seek(0); echo "\n"; //iterating the same result set again while ($row = $result->fetch_row()) { printf("Name: %s, Age: %d\n", $row[0], $row[1]); } //closing the connection $mysqli->close(); ?>
The output of the above code will be similar to:
Name: Adam, Age: 28 Name: John, Age: 27 Name: Kim, Age: 26 Name: Marry, Age: 23 Name: Marry, Age: 23 Name: Kim, Age: 26 Name: John, Age: 27 Name: Adam, Age: 28
❮ MySQLi Functions Reference