Format input so it can be safely used as a literal in a query. Literals
are values such as strings or numbers which get utilized in places like
WHERE, SET and
VALUES clauses of SQL statements.
The format returned depends on the PHP data type of input and the
database type being used.
Parameter
mixed
$in
the input to be quoted
Return value
mixed - the formatted data
The format of the results depends on the input's PHP type:
input -> returns
NULL -> the string NULL
integer or float -> the unquoted number
boolean -> output depends on the driver in use
Most drivers return integers: 1 if
true or 0 if
false.
Some return strings: TRUE if
true or FALSE if
false.
Finally one returns strings: T if
true or F if
false. Here is a list of each DBMS,
the values returned and the suggested column type:
dbase -> T/F
(Logical)
fbase -> TRUE/FALSE
(BOOLEAN)
ibase -> 1/0
(SMALLINT) [1]
ifx -> 1/0
(SMALLINT) [1]
msql -> 1/0
(INTEGER)
mssql -> 1/0
(TINYINT)
mysql -> 1/0
(TINYINT(1))
mysqli -> 1/0
(TINYINT(1))
oci8 -> 1/0
(NUMBER(1))
odbc -> 1/0
(SMALLINT) [1]
pgsql -> TRUE/FALSE
(BOOLEAN)
sqlite -> 1/0
(INTEGER)
sybase -> 1/0
(TINYINT)
[1] Accommodate the lowest common denominator because not all
versions of have BOOLEAN.
other (including strings and numeric strings) ->
a string which has been escaped in a DBMS specific way
(using
escapeSimple())
and then surrounded by single quotes
<?php
// Once you have a valid DB object named $db...
$name = "all's well";
$active = true;
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM clients WHERE name = '
. $db->quoteSmart($name)
. ' AND active = '
. $db->quoteSmart($active);
$res =& $db->query($sql);
?>