pg_field_prtlen
    (PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5)
pg_field_prtlen -- Returns the printed length
Description
int 
pg_field_prtlen ( resource result, int row_number, mixed field_name_or_number )
int 
pg_field_prtlen ( resource result, mixed field_name_or_number )
   pg_field_prtlen() returns the actual printed
   length (number of characters) of a specific value in a PostgreSQL
   result.  Row numbering starts at 0.  This
   function will return -1 on an error.
  
   field_name_or_number can be passed either as an
   integer or as a string. If it is passed as an
   integer, PHP recognises it as the field number, otherwise as
   field name.
  
   See the example given at the pg_field_name() page.
  
Note: 
     This function used to be called pg_fieldprtlen().
   
Parameters
   
- result
 
       PostgreSQL query result resource, returned by pg_query(),
       pg_query_params() or pg_execute()
       (among others).
      
- row
 
       Row number in result.  Rows are numbered from 0 upwards.  If omitted,
       current row is fetched.
      
 
  Return Values
   The field printed length, or FALSE on error.
  
Examples
   
Example 1. Getting information about fields 
<?php   $dbconn = pg_connect("dbname=publisher") or die("Could not connect");
    $res = pg_query($dbconn, "select * from authors where author = 'Orwell'");   $i = pg_num_fields($res);   for ($j = 0; $j < $i; $j++) {       echo "column $j\n";       $fieldname = pg_field_name($res, $j);       echo "fieldname: $fieldname\n";       echo "printed length: " . pg_field_prtlen($res, $fieldname) . " characters\n";       echo "storage length: " . pg_field_size($res, $j) . " bytes\n";       echo "field type: " . pg_field_type($res, $j) . " \n\n";   } ?>
 |  
 The above example will output: column 0
fieldname: author
printed length: 6 characters
storage length: -1 bytes
field type: varchar 
column 1
fieldname: year
printed length: 4 characters
storage length: 2 bytes
field type: int2 
column 2
fieldname: title
printed length: 24 characters
storage length: -1 bytes
field type: varchar  |  
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