mysql_fetch_object Fetch a result row as an object &reftitle.description; objectmysql_fetch_object resourceresult stringclass_name arrayparams Returns an object with properties that correspond to the fetched row and moves the internal data pointer ahead. &reftitle.parameters; &mysql.result.description; class_name The name of the class to instantiate, set the properties of and return. If not specified, a stdClass object is returned. params An optional array of parameters to pass to the constructor for class_name objects. &reftitle.returnvalues; Returns an object with string properties that correspond to the fetched row, or &false; if there are no more rows. mysql_fetch_row fetches one row of data from the result associated with the specified result identifier. The row is returned as an array. Each result column is stored in an array offset, starting at offset 0. &reftitle.changelog; &Version; &Description; 5.0.0 Added the ability to return as a different object. &reftitle.examples; <function>mysql_fetch_object</function> example user_id; echo $row->fullname; } mysql_free_result($result); ?> ]]> <function>mysql_fetch_object</function> example ]]> &reftitle.notes; Performance Speed-wise, the function is identical to mysql_fetch_array, and almost as quick as mysql_fetch_row (the difference is insignificant). mysql_fetch_object is similar to mysql_fetch_array, with one difference - an object is returned, instead of an array. Indirectly, that means that you can only access the data by the field names, and not by their offsets (numbers are illegal property names). &database.field-case; &database.fetch-null; &reftitle.seealso; mysql_fetch_array mysql_fetch_assoc mysql_fetch_row mysql_data_seek mysql_query