(PHP 4 >= 4.0.7, PHP 5, PECL odbtp >= 1.1.1)
mssql_bind — Adds a parameter to a stored procedure or a remote stored procedure
Binds a parameter to a stored procedure or a remote stored procedure.
Statement resource, obtained with mssql_init().
The parameter name, as a string.
Note:
You have to include the @ character, like in the T-SQL syntax. See the explanation included in mssql_execute().
The PHP variable you'll bind the MSSQL parameter to. It is passed by reference, to retrieve OUTPUT and RETVAL values after the procedure execution.
One of: SQLTEXT, SQLVARCHAR, SQLCHAR, SQLINT1, SQLINT2, SQLINT4, SQLBIT, SQLFLT4, SQLFLT8, SQLFLTN.
Whether the value is an OUTPUT parameter or not. If it's an OUTPUT parameter and you don't mention it, it will be treated as a normal input parameter and no error will be thrown.
Whether the parameter is NULL or not. Passing the NULL value as var will not do the job.
Used with char/varchar values. You have to indicate the length of the data so if the parameter is a varchar(50), the type must be SQLVARCHAR and this value 50.
Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
Example #1 mssql_bind() example
<?php
// Connect to MSSQL and select the database
mssql_connect('KALLESPC\SQLEXPRESS', 'sa', 'phpfi');
mssql_select_db('php');
// Create a new stored prodecure
$stmt = mssql_init('NewUserRecord');
// Bind the field names
mssql_bind($stmt, '@username', 'Kalle', SQLVARCHAR, false, false, 60);
mssql_bind($stmt, '@name', 'Kalle', SQLVARCHAR, false, false, 60);
mssql_bind($stmt, '@age', 19, SQLINT1, false, false, 3);
// Execute
mssql_execute($stmt);
// Free statement
mssql_free_statement($stmt);
?>