X-Git-Url: http://git.phpeclipse.com diff --git a/net.sourceforge.phpeclipse/src/net/sourceforge/phpeclipse/phpeditor/phpsyntax.xml b/net.sourceforge.phpeclipse/src/net/sourceforge/phpeclipse/phpeditor/phpsyntax.xml index 51ee93c..3824b20 100644 --- a/net.sourceforge.phpeclipse/src/net/sourceforge/phpeclipse/phpeditor/phpsyntax.xml +++ b/net.sourceforge.phpeclipse/src/net/sourceforge/phpeclipse/phpeditor/phpsyntax.xml @@ -4,26 +4,42 @@ =================================================== *Below this are the various PHP-specific functions * =================================================== - - - + Invokes a COM module + Loads a COM module + Return the absolute value of the number - + Return the arc cosine of the arg in radians + Returns the inverse hyperbolic cosine of arg - + +Returns a string with backslashes before characters that are listed in charlist parameter. +It escapes \n, \r etc. in C-like style, characters with ASCII code lower than 32 and +higher than 126 are converted to octal representation. - - + +Returns a string with backslashes before characters that need to be quoted in database queries etc. +These characters are single quote ('), double quote ("), backslash (\) and NUL (the NULL byte). + +Aggregates methods and properties defined in a class to an existing object. +Methods and properties with names starting with an underscore character (_) are considered private +to the aggregated class and are not used, constructors are also excluded from the aggregation procedure. - - - + +apache_child_terminate() will register the Apache process executing the current PHP request for termination +once execution of PHP code it is completed. It may be used to terminate a process after a script with +high memory consumption has been run as memory will usually only be freed internally but not given +back to the operating system. + + +This performs a partial request for a URI. It goes just far enough to obtain all the important information +about the given resource and returns this information in a class. + @@ -123,10 +139,10 @@ - + bool class_exists(string classname) - + void closedir([resource dir_handle]) @@ -223,7 +239,7 @@ - + Creates an anonymous function, and returns its name (funny, eh?) @@ -315,13 +331,15 @@ - + Define a new constant - + Check whether a constant exists - + +Directory class with properties, handle and class and methods read, rewind and close. + @@ -1120,7 +1138,7 @@ - + @@ -1318,62 +1336,170 @@ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + +mysql_affected_rows() returns the number of rows affected by the last INSERT, +UPDATE or DELETE query associated with link_identifier. +If the link identifier isn't specified, the last link opened by mysql_connect() is assumed. + +Note: If you are using transactions, you need to call mysql_affected_rows() +after your INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE query, not after the commit. + +If the last query was a DELETE query with no WHERE clause, +all of the records will have been deleted from the table but this function will return zero. + +Note: When using UPDATE, MySQL will not update columns where the new value is the same as the old value. +This creates the possiblity that mysql_affected_rows() may not actually equal the number of rows matched, +only the number of rows that were literally affected by the query. + +mysql_affected_rows() does not work with SELECT statements; only on statements which modify records. +To retrieve the number of rows returned by a SELECT, use mysql_num_rows(). + +If the last query failed, this function will return -1. + + + + + + + + +Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure. + +mysql_drop_db() attempts to drop (remove) an entire database from the server +associated with the specified link identifier. + +For downward compatibility mysql_dropdb() can also be used. This is deprecated, however. + +Note: The function mysql_drop_db() is deprecated. +It is preferable to use mysql_query() to issue a SQL DROP DATABASE statement instead. + + +Returns the error number from the last MySQL function, or 0 (zero) if no error occurred. + +Errors coming back from the MySQL database backend no longer issue warnings. +Instead, use mysql_errno() to retrieve the error code. +Note that this function only returns the error code from the most recently executed +MySQL function (not including mysql_error() and mysql_errno()), so if you want to use it, +make sure you check the value before calling another MySQL function. + + +Returns the error text from the last MySQL function, or '' (the empty string) if no error occurred. + +Errors coming back from the MySQL database backend no longer issue warnings. +Instead, use mysql_error() to retrieve the error text. +Note that this function only returns the error text from the most recently +executed MySQL function (not including mysql_error() and mysql_errno()), +so if you want to use it, make sure you check the value before calling another MySQL function. + + + +Returns an array that corresponds to the fetched row, or FALSE if there are no more rows. + +mysql_fetch_array() is an extended version of mysql_fetch_row(). +In addition to storing the data in the numeric indices of the result array, +it also stores the data in associative indices, using the field names as keys. + +If two or more columns of the result have the same field names, +the last column will take precedence. To access the other column(s) of the same name, +you must use the numeric index of the column or make an alias for the column. +For aliased columns, you cannot access the contents with the original column name. + + +Returns an associative array that corresponds to the fetched row, or FALSE if there are no more rows. + +mysql_fetch_assoc() is equivalent to calling mysql_fetch_array() with MYSQL_ASSOC +for the optional second parameter. It only returns an associative array. +This is the way mysql_fetch_array() originally worked. +If you need the numeric indices as well as the associative, use mysql_fetch_array(). + +If two or more columns of the result have the same field names, the last column will take precedence. +To access the other column(s) of the same name, you either need to access the result +with numeric indices by using mysql_fetch_row() or add alias names. + +An important thing to note is that using mysql_fetch_assoc() is not significantly slower +than using mysql_fetch_row(), while it provides a significant added value. + + +Returns an object containing field information. + +mysql_fetch_field() can be used in order to obtain information about fields in a certain query result. +If the field offset isn't specified, the next field that wasn't yet retrieved by mysql_fetch_field() +is retrieved. + +The properties of the object are: +name - column name +table - name of the table the column belongs to +max_length - maximum length of the column +not_null - 1 if the column cannot be NULL +primary_key - 1 if the column is a primary key +unique_key - 1 if the column is a unique key +multiple_key - 1 if the column is a non-unique key +numeric - 1 if the column is numeric +blob - 1 if the column is a BLOB +type - the type of the column +unsigned - 1 if the column is unsigned +zerofill - 1 if the column is zero-filled + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +mysql_query() sends a query to the currently active database on the server +that's associated with the specified link identifier. +If link_identifier isn't specified, the last opened link is assumed. +If no link is open, the function tries to establish a link as if mysql_connect() +was called with no arguments, and use it. + +The optional result_mode parameter can be MYSQL_USE_RESULT and MYSQL_STORE_RESULT. +It defaults to MYSQL_STORE_RESULT, so the result is buffered. +See also mysql_unbuffered_query() for the counterpart of this behaviour. + - + +mysql_unbuffered_query() sends a SQL query query to MySQL, without fetching and buffering the +result rows automatically, as mysql_query() does. +On the one hand, this saves a considerable amount of memory with SQL queries +that produce large result sets. On the other hand, you can start working on +the result set immediately after the first row has been retrieved: you don't +have to wait until the complete SQL query has been performed. When using multiple DB-connects, +you have to specify the optional parameter link_identifier. + +The optional result_mode parameter can be MYSQL_USE_RESULT and MYSQL_STORE_RESULT. +It defaults to MYSQL_USE_RESULT, so the result is not buffered. +See also mysql_query() for the counterpart of this behaviour. + @@ -2052,7 +2178,7 @@ - + Returns part of a string