Executes a SQL query, but fetches only the the specificed
count of rows. It is an emulation of the MySQL LIMIT option.
Parameter
string
$query
the SQL query
integer
$from
the row to start to fetch.
Note that 0 returns the first row, 1 returns the second row, etc.
integer
$count
the numbers of rows to fetch
mixed
$params
array, string or numeric data to be added to the prepared statement.
Quantity of items passed must match quantity of placeholders in the
prepared statement: meaning 1 placeholder for non-array
parameters or 1 placeholder per array element.
Return value
mixed - a new DB_result object
for queries that return results (such as
SELECT queries),
DB_OK for queries that manipulate data (such as
INSERT queries)
or a DB_Error object on failure
Check the database related section of
PHP-Manual
to detect the reason for this error. In the most cases
a misformed SQL statment. Ie. using LIMIT in a SQL-Statment
for an Oracle database.
Note
This function can not be called
statically.
Depending on the database you will not really get
more speed compared to query(). The advantage of
limitQuery() is the deleting of unneeded
rows in the resultset, as early as possible. So this can
decrease memory usage.
<?php
// Once you have a valid DB object named $db...
$res =& $db->limitQuery('SELECT * FROM foo', 49, 10);
if (PEAR::isError($res)) {
die($res->getMessage());
}
?>