I've written this little function that functions simirarly to odbc_result_all, but works with MySQL:
/**
* This function emulates the odbc_result_all function, which will return a HTML table cosisting of
* the results of an SQL query.
* Usage: pass a mysql result set to this function, and it will return (not output) a string containing
* an HTML table
* Parameters:
* - $result is your mysql result set (result of a mysql_query() function call)
* - $tableFeatures is a string containing any HTML TABLE features you would like in the table
* (eg. BORDER="0" etc.)
*/
function _mysql_result_all($result, $tableFeatures="") {
$table .= "<!--Debugging output for SQL query-->\n\n";
$table .= "<table $tableFeatures>\n\n";
$noFields = mysql_num_fields($result);
$table .= "<tr>\n";
for ($i = 0; $i < $noFields; $i++) {
$field = mysql_field_name($result, $i);
$table .= "\t<th>$field</th>\n";
}
while ($r = mysql_fetch_row($result)) {
$table .= "<tr>\n";
foreach ($r as $kolonne) {
$table .= "\t<td>$kolonne</td>\n";
}
$table .= "</tr>\n";
}
$table .= "</table>\n\n";
$table .= "<!--End debug from SQL query-->\n\n";
return $table;
}
Enjoy...