Binds the PHP variable variable
to the Oracle
placeholder ph_name
. Whether it will be used for
input or output will be determined at run-time and the necessary
storage space will be allocated.
statement
An OCI statement.
ph_name
The placeholder.
variable
The PHP variable.
maxlength
Sets the maximum length for the bind. If you set it to -1, this
function will use the current length of variable
to set the maximum length.
type
If you need to bind an abstract datatype (LOB/ROWID/BFILE) you
need to allocate it first using the
oci_new_descriptor() function. The
length
is not used for abstract datatypes
and should be set to -1. The type
parameter
tells Oracle which descriptor is used. Possible
values are:
SQLT_FILE - for BFILEs;
SQLT_CFILE - for CFILEs;
SQLT_CLOB - for CLOBs;
SQLT_BLOB - for BLOBs;
SQLT_RDD - for ROWIDs;
SQLT_NTY - for named datatypes;
SQLT_INT - for integers;
SQLT_CHR - for VARCHARs;
SQLT_BIN - for RAW columns;
SQLT_LNG - for LONG columns;
SQLT_LBI - for LONG RAW columns;
SQLT_RSET - for cursors, that were created before with oci_new_cursor().
Remember, this function strips trailing whitespaces. See the following example:
Example 2. oci_bind_by_name() example
|
Example 3. oci_bind_by_name() example
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Warning |
Do not use magic_quotes_gpc or addslashes() and oci_bind_by_name() simultaneously as no quoting is needed and any magically applied quotes will be written into your database as oci_bind_by_name() is not able to distinguish magically added quotings from those added intentionally. |
Note: In PHP versions before 5.0.0 you must use ocibindbyname() instead. This name still can be used, it was left as alias of oci_bind_by_name() for downwards compatability. This, however, is deprecated and not recommended.