On Fri, Sep 23, 2005 at 08:55:44PM -0400, John DeSoi wrote: > pg_fetch_object() returns an object with properties that correspond > to the fetched row's field names. It can optionally instantiate an > object of a specific class, and pass parameters to that class's > constructor. > > I'm passing a class name string as the third parameter, but I only > get back a stdClass object. I also added an array of params as the > 4th parameter to pass to the constructor, but it does not appear to > be called. > > Has anyone successfully used this to create a class other than stdClass? Works here with PHP 5.0.4 and PostgreSQL 8.0.3: class Foo { function Foo($arg) { print "DEBUG: Foo($arg)\n"; } } pg_connect("dbname=test user=test password=test"); $result = pg_query("SELECT 'foo' AS val"); $obj = pg_fetch_object($result, 0, 'Foo', array("test")); var_dump($obj); pg_close(); The above code produces the following output: DEBUG: Foo(test) object(Foo)#1 (1) { ["val"]=> string(3) "foo" } Could you post a minimal example that doesn't work? -- Michael Fuhr ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match