Recently I wrote a self-answered question, addressing one certain problem, that causes a lot of questions on Stack Overflow that usually get wrongly closed with incorrect dupe target.
But got a message from a moderator, saying:
I appreciate that you're trying to setup some authoritative dupe targets, but "it fails" has never been a valid problem statement here. You need to expand the description of the problem and indicate under what conditions a syntax error would be generated, and (ideally) include a textual representation of the actual error so people can find this question via Google instead of one of the countless others that does include real error messages.
But the problem is, the poor folks facing this problem are unable to formulate anything certain. The problem appears to them in various indirect consequences, so the titles are anything but an "actual error":
- PHP Insert Into not Working?
- Column count doesn't match value count, but there are 6 values and 6 columns
- Insert query not being fired
- PHP MYSQLi - Insert Hyphen into database
- How to avoid mysqli_fetch_array() warning?
- capture array values from input fields using php in mysqli
As you can see, there is no visible pattern in all these titles, let alone a certain error message. While the cause for all their problems is essentially the same: wrong way of constructing an SQL query in a PHP script.
So the question is: how can I title this question, to satisfy the moderator?
A short backstory behind this answer: all questions I intend to close as a dupe of this one are caused by the same problem - variables are added directly to the query, thus causing a syntax error. Simply adding quotes is not enough, as there is still a danger of either a syntax error or an SQL injection. So, if someone asks, what's wrong with a code like
$name = "Joe"
$sql = "INSERT INTO t VALUES($name)";
the proper answer would be not "just add quotes around $name" but "use prepared statements".
Therefore, for some time I tried to close this kind of questions as a dupe of "How can I prevent SQL injection in PHP?", but got reproached, for the reason stated as "the OP didn't ask about SQL injection". There is an exemplary question of the kind - Updating mysqli multiple columns error PHP - which I closed for the aforementioned reason, but it got reopened and re-closed with the wrong target, so it took a moderator's intervention to get things back to sanity.
So, decided I, there should be another question that doesn't mention SQL injection, but a mere syntax error, to let all literal-kind of folks to cope with the answer.
Update
I've fixed the question according to the suggestions given.