You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

387 lines
15 KiB

14 years ago
<?php
/**
* Query class file.
*
* @author Qiang Xue <qiang.xue@gmail.com>
* @link http://www.yiiframework.com/
* @copyright Copyright &copy; 2008-2012 Yii Software LLC
* @license http://www.yiiframework.com/license/
*/
namespace yii\db\dao;
/**
* Query represents the components in a DB query.
*
* @author Qiang Xue <qiang.xue@gmail.com>
* @since 2.0
*/
14 years ago
class Query extends \yii\base\Component
14 years ago
{
/**
* @var mixed the columns being selected. This refers to the SELECT clause in an SQL
* statement. The property can be either a string (column names separated by commas)
* or an array of column names. Defaults to '*', meaning all columns.
*/
public $select;
14 years ago
/**
* @var string additional option that should be appended to the 'SELECT' keyword. For example,
* in MySQL, the option 'SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS' can be used.
*/
public $selectOption;
14 years ago
public $from;
/**
* @var boolean whether to select distinct rows of data only. If this is set true,
* the SELECT clause would be changed to SELECT DISTINCT.
*/
public $distinct;
/**
* @var string query condition. This refers to the WHERE clause in an SQL statement.
* For example, <code>age>31 AND team=1</code>.
*/
public $where;
/**
* @var integer maximum number of records to be returned. If less than 0, it means no limit.
*/
public $limit;
/**
* @var integer zero-based offset from where the records are to be returned. If less than 0, it means starting from the beginning.
*/
public $offset;
/**
* @var string how to sort the query results. This refers to the ORDER BY clause in an SQL statement.
*/
public $orderBy;
/**
* @var string how to group the query results. This refers to the GROUP BY clause in an SQL statement.
* For example, <code>'projectID, teamID'</code>.
*/
public $groupBy;
/**
* @var string how to join with other tables. This refers to the JOIN clause in an SQL statement.
* For example, <code>'LEFT JOIN users ON users.id=authorID'</code>.
*/
public $join;
/**
* @var string the condition to be applied with GROUP-BY clause.
* For example, <code>'SUM(revenue)<50000'</code>.
*/
public $having;
/**
* @var array list of query parameter values indexed by parameter placeholders.
* For example, <code>array(':name'=>'Dan', ':age'=>31)</code>.
*/
14 years ago
public $params = array();
14 years ago
public $union;
public function getSql($connection)
{
return $connection->getQueryBuilder()->build($this);
}
14 years ago
public function addParams($params)
{
foreach ($params as $name => $value) {
if (is_integer($name)) {
$this->params[] = $value;
}
else {
$this->params[$name] = $value;
}
}
}
14 years ago
/**
* Appends a condition to the existing {@link condition}.
* The new condition and the existing condition will be concatenated via the specified operator
* which defaults to 'AND'.
* The new condition can also be an array. In this case, all elements in the array
* will be concatenated together via the operator.
* This method handles the case when the existing condition is empty.
* After calling this method, the {@link condition} property will be modified.
* @param mixed $condition the new condition. It can be either a string or an array of strings.
* @param string $operator the operator to join different conditions. Defaults to 'AND'.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.0.9
*/
public function addCondition($condition, $operator = 'AND')
{
if (is_array($condition))
{
if ($condition === array())
return $this;
$condition = '(' . implode(') ' . $operator . ' (', $condition) . ')';
}
if ($this->condition === '')
$this->condition = $condition;
else
$this->condition = '(' . $this->condition . ') ' . $operator . ' (' . $condition . ')';
return $this;
}
/**
* Appends a search condition to the existing {@link condition}.
* The search condition and the existing condition will be concatenated via the specified operator
* which defaults to 'AND'.
* The search condition is generated using the SQL LIKE operator with the given column name and
* search keyword.
* @param string $column the column name (or a valid SQL expression)
* @param string $keyword the search keyword. This interpretation of the keyword is affected by the next parameter.
* @param boolean $escape whether the keyword should be escaped if it contains characters % or _.
* When this parameter is true (default), the special characters % (matches 0 or more characters)
* and _ (matches a single character) will be escaped, and the keyword will be surrounded with a %
* character on both ends. When this parameter is false, the keyword will be directly used for
* matching without any change.
* @param string $operator the operator used to concatenate the new condition with the existing one.
* Defaults to 'AND'.
* @param string $like the LIKE operator. Defaults to 'LIKE'. You may also set this to be 'NOT LIKE'.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.0.10
*/
public function addSearchCondition($column, $keyword, $escape = true, $operator = 'AND', $like = 'LIKE')
{
if ($keyword == '')
return $this;
if ($escape)
$keyword = '%' . strtr($keyword, array('%' => '\%', '_' => '\_', '\\' => '\\\\')) . '%';
$condition = $column . " $like " . self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount;
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $keyword;
return $this->addCondition($condition, $operator);
}
/**
* Appends an IN condition to the existing {@link condition}.
* The IN condition and the existing condition will be concatenated via the specified operator
* which defaults to 'AND'.
* The IN condition is generated by using the SQL IN operator which requires the specified
* column value to be among the given list of values.
* @param string $column the column name (or a valid SQL expression)
* @param array $values list of values that the column value should be in
* @param string $operator the operator used to concatenate the new condition with the existing one.
* Defaults to 'AND'.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.0.10
*/
public function addInCondition($column, $values, $operator = 'AND')
{
if (($n = count($values)) < 1)
return $this->addCondition('0=1', $operator); // 0=1 is used because in MSSQL value alone can't be used in WHERE
if ($n === 1)
{
$value = reset($values);
if ($value === null)
return $this->addCondition($column . ' IS NULL');
$condition = $column . '=' . self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount;
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $value;
}
else
{
$params = array();
foreach ($values as $value)
{
$params[] = self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount;
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $value;
}
$condition = $column . ' IN (' . implode(', ', $params) . ')';
}
return $this->addCondition($condition, $operator);
}
/**
* Appends an NOT IN condition to the existing {@link condition}.
* The NOT IN condition and the existing condition will be concatenated via the specified operator
* which defaults to 'AND'.
* The NOT IN condition is generated by using the SQL NOT IN operator which requires the specified
* column value to be among the given list of values.
* @param string $column the column name (or a valid SQL expression)
* @param array $values list of values that the column value should not be in
* @param string $operator the operator used to concatenate the new condition with the existing one.
* Defaults to 'AND'.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.1.1
*/
public function addNotInCondition($column, $values, $operator = 'AND')
{
if (($n = count($values)) < 1)
return $this;
if ($n === 1)
{
$value = reset($values);
if ($value === null)
return $this->addCondition($column . ' IS NOT NULL');
$condition = $column . '!=' . self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount;
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $value;
}
else
{
$params = array();
foreach ($values as $value)
{
$params[] = self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount;
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $value;
}
$condition = $column . ' NOT IN (' . implode(', ', $params) . ')';
}
return $this->addCondition($condition, $operator);
}
/**
* Appends a condition for matching the given list of column values.
* The generated condition will be concatenated to the existing {@link condition}
* via the specified operator which defaults to 'AND'.
* The condition is generated by matching each column and the corresponding value.
* @param array $columns list of column names and values to be matched (name=>value)
* @param string $columnOperator the operator to concatenate multiple column matching condition. Defaults to 'AND'.
* @param string $operator the operator used to concatenate the new condition with the existing one.
* Defaults to 'AND'.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.0.10
*/
public function addColumnCondition($columns, $columnOperator = 'AND', $operator = 'AND')
{
$params = array();
foreach ($columns as $name => $value)
{
if ($value === null)
$params[] = $name . ' IS NULL';
else
{
$params[] = $name . '=' . self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount;
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $value;
}
}
return $this->addCondition(implode(" $columnOperator ", $params), $operator);
}
/**
* Adds a comparison expression to the {@link condition} property.
*
* This method is a helper that appends to the {@link condition} property
* with a new comparison expression. The comparison is done by comparing a column
* with the given value using some comparison operator.
*
* The comparison operator is intelligently determined based on the first few
* characters in the given value. In particular, it recognizes the following operators
* if they appear as the leading characters in the given value:
* <ul>
* <li><code>&lt;</code>: the column must be less than the given value.</li>
* <li><code>&gt;</code>: the column must be greater than the given value.</li>
* <li><code>&lt;=</code>: the column must be less than or equal to the given value.</li>
* <li><code>&gt;=</code>: the column must be greater than or equal to the given value.</li>
* <li><code>&lt;&gt;</code>: the column must not be the same as the given value.
* Note that when $partialMatch is true, this would mean the value must not be a substring
* of the column.</li>
* <li><code>=</code>: the column must be equal to the given value.</li>
* <li>none of the above: the column must be equal to the given value. Note that when $partialMatch
* is true, this would mean the value must be the same as the given value or be a substring of it.</li>
* </ul>
*
* Note that any surrounding white spaces will be removed from the value before comparison.
* When the value is empty, no comparison expression will be added to the search condition.
*
* @param string $column the name of the column to be searched
* @param mixed $value the column value to be compared with. If the value is a string, the aforementioned
* intelligent comparison will be conducted. If the value is an array, the comparison is done
* by exact match of any of the value in the array. If the string or the array is empty,
* the existing search condition will not be modified.
* @param boolean $partialMatch whether the value should consider partial text match (using LIKE and NOT LIKE operators).
* Defaults to false, meaning exact comparison.
* @param string $operator the operator used to concatenate the new condition with the existing one.
* Defaults to 'AND'.
* @param boolean $escape whether the value should be escaped if $partialMatch is true and
* the value contains characters % or _. When this parameter is true (default),
* the special characters % (matches 0 or more characters)
* and _ (matches a single character) will be escaped, and the value will be surrounded with a %
* character on both ends. When this parameter is false, the value will be directly used for
* matching without any change.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.1.1
*/
public function compare($column, $value, $partialMatch = false, $operator = 'AND', $escape = true)
{
if (is_array($value))
{
if ($value === array())
return $this;
return $this->addInCondition($column, $value, $operator);
}
else
$value = "$value";
if (preg_match('/^(?:\s*(<>|<=|>=|<|>|=))?(.*)$/', $value, $matches))
{
$value = $matches[2];
$op = $matches[1];
}
else
$op = '';
if ($value === '')
return $this;
if ($partialMatch)
{
if ($op === '')
return $this->addSearchCondition($column, $value, $escape, $operator);
if ($op === '<>')
return $this->addSearchCondition($column, $value, $escape, $operator, 'NOT LIKE');
}
elseif ($op === '')
$op = '=';
$this->addCondition($column . $op . self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount, $operator);
$this->params[self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++] = $value;
return $this;
}
/**
* Adds a between condition to the {@link condition} property.
*
* The new between condition and the existing condition will be concatenated via
* the specified operator which defaults to 'AND'.
* If one or both values are empty then the condition is not added to the existing condition.
* This method handles the case when the existing condition is empty.
* After calling this method, the {@link condition} property will be modified.
* @param string $column the name of the column to search between.
* @param string $valueStart the beginning value to start the between search.
* @param string $valueEnd the ending value to end the between search.
* @param string $operator the operator used to concatenate the new condition with the existing one.
* Defaults to 'AND'.
* @return Query the criteria object itself
* @since 1.1.2
*/
public function addBetweenCondition($column, $valueStart, $valueEnd, $operator = 'AND')
{
if ($valueStart === '' || $valueEnd === '')
return $this;
$paramStart = self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++;
$paramEnd = self::PARAM_PREFIX . self::$paramCount++;
$this->params[$paramStart] = $valueStart;
$this->params[$paramEnd] = $valueEnd;
$condition = "$column BETWEEN $paramStart AND $paramEnd";
if ($this->condition === '')
$this->condition = $condition;
else
$this->condition = '(' . $this->condition . ') ' . $operator . ' (' . $condition . ')';
return $this;
}
/**
* @return array the array representation of the criteria
* @since 1.0.6
*/
public function toArray()
{
$result = array();
foreach (array('select', 'condition', 'params', 'limit', 'offset', 'order', 'group', 'join', 'having', 'distinct', 'scopes', 'with', 'alias', 'index', 'together') as $name)
$result[$name] = $this->$name;
return $result;
}
}