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<?php
/**
* @link http://www.yiiframework.com/
* @copyright Copyright (c) 2008 Yii Software LLC
* @license http://www.yiiframework.com/license/
*/
namespace yii\db;
/**
* The BaseQuery trait represents the minimum method set of a database Query.
*
* It has support for getting [[one]] instance or [[all]].
* Allows pagination via [[limit]] and [[offset]].
* Sorting is supported via [[orderBy]] and items can be limited to match some conditions unsing [[where]].
*
* By calling [[createCommand()]], we can get a [[Command]] instance which can be further
* used to perform/execute the DB query against a database.
*
* @author Qiang Xue <qiang.xue@gmail.com>
* @author Carsten Brandt <mail@cebe.cc>
* @since 2.0
*/
trait QueryTrait
{
/**
* @var string|array query condition. This refers to the WHERE clause in a SQL statement.
* For example, `age > 31 AND team = 1`.
* @see where()
*/
public $where;
/**
* @var integer maximum number of records to be returned. If not set or less than 0, it means no limit.
*/
public $limit;
/**
* @var integer zero-based offset from where the records are to be returned. If not set or
* less than 0, it means starting from the beginning.
*/
public $offset;
/**
* @var array how to sort the query results. This is used to construct the ORDER BY clause in a SQL statement.
* The array keys are the columns to be sorted by, and the array values are the corresponding sort directions which
* can be either [SORT_ASC](http://php.net/manual/en/array.constants.php#constant.sort-asc)
* or [SORT_DESC](http://php.net/manual/en/array.constants.php#constant.sort-desc).
* The array may also contain [[Expression]] objects. If that is the case, the expressions
* will be converted into strings without any change.
*/
public $orderBy;
/**
* @var string|callable $column the name of the column by which the query results should be indexed by.
* This can also be a callable (e.g. anonymous function) that returns the index value based on the given
* row data. For more details, see [[indexBy()]]. This property is only used by [[all()]].
*/
public $indexBy;
/**
* Sets the [[indexBy]] property.
* @param string|callable $column the name of the column by which the query results should be indexed by.
* This can also be a callable (e.g. anonymous function) that returns the index value based on the given
* row data. The signature of the callable should be:
*
* ~~~
* function ($row)
* {
* // return the index value corresponding to $row
* }
* ~~~
*
* @return static the query object itself
*/
public function indexBy($column)
{
$this->indexBy = $column;
return $this;
}
/**
* Sets the WHERE part of the query.
*
* See [[QueryInterface::where()]] for detailed documentation.
*
* @param array $condition the conditions that should be put in the WHERE part.
* @return static the query object itself
* @see andWhere()
* @see orWhere()
*/
public function where($condition)
{
$this->where = $condition;
return $this;
}
/**
* Adds an additional WHERE condition to the existing one.
* The new condition and the existing one will be joined using the 'AND' operator.
* @param string|array $condition the new WHERE condition. Please refer to [[where()]]
* on how to specify this parameter.
* @return static the query object itself
* @see where()
* @see orWhere()
*/
public function andWhere($condition)
{
if ($this->where === null) {
$this->where = $condition;
} else {
$this->where = ['and', $this->where, $condition];
}
return $this;
}
/**
* Adds an additional WHERE condition to the existing one.
* The new condition and the existing one will be joined using the 'OR' operator.
* @param string|array $condition the new WHERE condition. Please refer to [[where()]]
* on how to specify this parameter.
* @return static the query object itself
* @see where()
* @see andWhere()
*/
public function orWhere($condition)
{
if ($this->where === null) {
$this->where = $condition;
} else {
$this->where = ['or', $this->where, $condition];
}
return $this;
}
/**
* Sets the ORDER BY part of the query.
* @param string|array $columns the columns (and the directions) to be ordered by.
* Columns can be specified in either a string (e.g. "id ASC, name DESC") or an array
* (e.g. `['id' => SORT_ASC, 'name' => SORT_DESC]`).
* The method will automatically quote the column names unless a column contains some parenthesis
* (which means the column contains a DB expression).
* Note that if your order-by is an expression containing commas, you should always use an array
* to represent the order-by information. Otherwise, the method will not be able to correctly determine
* the order-by columns.
* @return static the query object itself
* @see addOrderBy()
*/
public function orderBy($columns)
{
$this->orderBy = $this->normalizeOrderBy($columns);
return $this;
}
/**
* Adds additional ORDER BY columns to the query.
* @param string|array $columns the columns (and the directions) to be ordered by.
* Columns can be specified in either a string (e.g. "id ASC, name DESC") or an array
* (e.g. `['id' => SORT_ASC, 'name' => SORT_DESC]`).
* The method will automatically quote the column names unless a column contains some parenthesis
* (which means the column contains a DB expression).
* @return static the query object itself
* @see orderBy()
*/
public function addOrderBy($columns)
{
$columns = $this->normalizeOrderBy($columns);
if ($this->orderBy === null) {
$this->orderBy = $columns;
} else {
$this->orderBy = array_merge($this->orderBy, $columns);
}
return $this;
}
protected function normalizeOrderBy($columns)
{
if (is_array($columns)) {
return $columns;
} else {
$columns = preg_split('/\s*,\s*/', trim($columns), -1, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
$result = [];
foreach ($columns as $column) {
if (preg_match('/^(.*?)\s+(asc|desc)$/i', $column, $matches)) {
$result[$matches[1]] = strcasecmp($matches[2], 'desc') ? SORT_ASC : SORT_DESC;
} else {
$result[$column] = SORT_ASC;
}
}
return $result;
}
}
/**
* Sets the LIMIT part of the query.
* @param integer $limit the limit. Use null or negative value to disable limit.
* @return static the query object itself
*/
public function limit($limit)
{
$this->limit = $limit;
return $this;
}
/**
* Sets the OFFSET part of the query.
* @param integer $offset the offset. Use null or negative value to disable offset.
* @return static the query object itself
*/
public function offset($offset)
{
$this->offset = $offset;
return $this;
}
}