If your php is older than version 4.3.0, you can use the following:
$arr_record = get_object_vars(ibase_fetch_object($sql_result));
which is the same as: $arr_record = ibase_fetch_assoc($sql_result);
(PHP 5, PHP 7 < 7.4.0)
ibase_fetch_assoc — Fetch a result row from a query as an associative array
$result
, int $fetch_flag
= 0
) : arrayFetch a result row from a query as an associative array.
ibase_fetch_assoc() fetches one row of data from the
result
. If two or more columns of the result
have the same field names, the last column will take precedence. To
access the other column(s) of the same name, you either need to access
the result with numeric indices by using
ibase_fetch_row() or use alias names in your query.
result
The result handle.
fetch_flag
fetch_flag
is a combination of the constants
IBASE_TEXT
and IBASE_UNIXTIME
ORed together. Passing IBASE_TEXT
will cause this
function to return BLOB contents instead of BLOB ids. Passing
IBASE_UNIXTIME
will cause this function to return
date/time values as Unix timestamps instead of as formatted strings.
Returns an associative array that corresponds to the fetched row.
Subsequent calls will return the next row in the result set, or false
if
there are no more rows.
If your php is older than version 4.3.0, you can use the following:
$arr_record = get_object_vars(ibase_fetch_object($sql_result));
which is the same as: $arr_record = ibase_fetch_assoc($sql_result);
Unlike mysql_fetch_assoc, all indexes of associative array are upper-case.
so, use
$row = ibase_fetch_assoc($result);
echo $row["INDEX"];
not
echo $row["index"];