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$query = "SELECT * FROM table";
$result = mysql_query($query, $db);
$all = mysql_fetch_assoc($result);
echo mysql_num_rows($result) . ":" . count($all);

This returns

2063:7

I have not used count before, so I'm not 100% sure it's not counting the table columns. It's late and I might be going nuts.

Here's another example of what's happening:

$result = mysql_query($query, $db);
echo "Rows: " . mysql_num_rows($result) . " <BR />";

$player_array = mysql_fetch_assoc($result);
echo "<pre>";
print_r($player_array);
echo "</pre>";

Which outputs:

Rows: 9 
Array
(
    [playerID] => 10000030
)

TL;DR: I submit queries which return multiple rows, but fetch_array only gives me a small portion of those rows in the resulting array.

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1 Answer

Every call to mysql_fetch_assoc($result); gives you one row of the result set:

(from the documentation)

mysql_fetch_assoc — Fetch a result row as an associative array

Returns an associative array that corresponds to the fetched row and moves the internal data pointer ahead. mysql_fetch_assoc() is equivalent to calling mysql_fetch_array() with MYSQL_ASSOC for the optional second parameter. It only returns an associative array.

You have to use the function in a loop:

$all = array();

while(($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result))) {
    $all[] = $row;
}

The example in the document shows how it is done.


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