I have used MySQL a lot, but I always wondered exactly how does it work - when I get a positive result, where is the data stored exactly? For example, I write like this:
The details are implementation dependent but generally speaking, results are buffered. Executing a query against a database will return some result set. If it's sufficiently small all the results may be returned with the initial call or some might be and more results are returned as you iterate over the result object.
Think of the sequence this way:
The idea of all this is to minimize roundtrips to the server without sending back too much unnecessary data, which is why if you ask for a million rows you won't get them all back at once.
LIMIT clauses--or any clause in fact--will modify the result set.
Lastly, (7) is important because SELECT * FROM table WHERE a = 'foo' and SELECT * FROM table WHERE a = 'bar' are two different queries as far as the database optimizer is concerned so an execution plan must be determined for each separately. But a parameterized query (SELECT * FROM table WHERE a = :param) with different parameters is one query and only needs to be planned once (at least until it falls out of the query cache).