I successfully tried updating a couple of my comments, including one on this page, and I successfully updated the comment you referred to, though that was with a different script than you would use. So, I have not been able to repeat what you did.
Looking at the PHP error log, I see multiple errors looking like this:
Failed to prepare SQL in update_row: UPDATE `Comment` SE WHERE `CommentID` = :keyvalue
This was added to the error log by a catch clause I have in update_row().
That "SE" shouldn't be there, but there should be the word "SET" followed by a series of parameters being assigned to table columns. Since we appear to be in the same time zone, these were just over an hour and a half ago, and I was not doing any programming then.
Looking at the individual lines modifying $sql, most lines just append to it, and one uses substr to delete the last two characters. That points to one thing that happened. The $sql string could have this value if it were passed an empty array. After appending nothing to "UPDATE Comment SET ", it chopped off the last two characters and appended " WHERE CommentID = :keyvalue". I added some code to update_row to catch this error before this happens, but I'm still not sure why it happened. This is about what arguments were passed in the function call and not about how the function operated.
I successfully tried updating a couple of my comments, including one on this page, and I successfully updated the comment you referred to, though that was with a different script than you would use. So, I have not been able to repeat what you did.
Looking at the PHP error log, I see multiple errors looking like this:
This was added to the error log by a catch clause I have in update_row().
That "SE" shouldn't be there, but there should be the word "SET" followed by a series of parameters being assigned to table columns. Since we appear to be in the same time zone, these were just over an hour and a half ago, and I was not doing any programming then.
Looking at the individual lines modifying $sql, most lines just append to it, and one uses substr to delete the last two characters. That points to one thing that happened. The $sql string could have this value if it were passed an empty array. After appending nothing to "UPDATE
Comment
SET ", it chopped off the last two characters and appended " WHERECommentID
= :keyvalue". I added some code to update_row to catch this error before this happens, but I'm still not sure why it happened. This is about what arguments were passed in the function call and not about how the function operated.