162 lines
4.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
162 lines
4.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
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Models
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======
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Getting data from objects
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Once you've got a set of records (objects) back from a query, you can
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access properties on those objects (the values stored in the columns in
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its corresponding table) in two ways: by using the ``get`` method, or
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simply by accessing the property on the object directly:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->find_one(5);
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// The following two forms are equivalent
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$name = $person->get('name');
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$name = $person->name;
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You can also get the all the data wrapped by an ORM instance using the
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``as_array`` method. This will return an associative array mapping
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column names (keys) to their values.
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The ``as_array`` method takes column names as optional arguments. If one
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or more of these arguments is supplied, only matching column names will
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be returned.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->create();
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$person->first_name = 'Fred';
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$person->surname = 'Bloggs';
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$person->age = 50;
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// Returns array('first_name' => 'Fred', 'surname' => 'Bloggs', 'age' => 50)
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$data = $person->as_array();
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// Returns array('first_name' => 'Fred', 'age' => 50)
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$data = $person->as_array('first_name', 'age');
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Updating records
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To update the database, change one or more of the properties of the
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object, then call the ``save`` method to commit the changes to the
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database. Again, you can change the values of the object's properties
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either by using the ``set`` method or by setting the value of the
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property directly. By using the ``set`` method it is also possible to
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update multiple properties at once, by passing in an associative array:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->find_one(5);
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// The following two forms are equivalent
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$person->set('name', 'Bob Smith');
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$person->age = 20;
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// This is equivalent to the above two assignments
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$person->set(array(
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'name' => 'Bob Smith',
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'age' => 20
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));
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// Syncronise the object with the database
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$person->save();
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Properties containing expressions
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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It is possible to set properties on the model that contain database
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expressions using the ``set_expr`` method.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->find_one(5);
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$person->set('name', 'Bob Smith');
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$person->age = 20;
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$person->set_expr('updated', 'NOW()');
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$person->save();
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The ``updated`` column's value will be inserted into query in its raw
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form therefore allowing the database to execute any functions referenced
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- such as ``NOW()`` in this case.
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Creating new records
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To add a new record, you need to first create an "empty" object
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instance. You then set values on the object as normal, and save it.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->create();
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$person->name = 'Joe Bloggs';
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$person->age = 40;
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$person->save();
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After the object has been saved, you can call its ``id()`` method to
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find the autogenerated primary key value that the database assigned to
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it.
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Properties containing expressions
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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It is possible to set properties on the model that contain database
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expressions using the ``set_expr`` method.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->create();
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$person->set('name', 'Bob Smith');
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$person->age = 20;
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$person->set_expr('added', 'NOW()');
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$person->save();
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The ``added`` column's value will be inserted into query in its raw form
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therefore allowing the database to execute any functions referenced -
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such as ``NOW()`` in this case.
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Checking whether a property has been modified
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To check whether a property has been changed since the object was
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created (or last saved), call the ``is_dirty`` method:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$name_has_changed = $person->is_dirty('name'); // Returns true or false
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Deleting records
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To delete an object from the database, simply call its ``delete``
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method.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')->find_one(5);
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$person->delete();
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To delete more than one object from the database, build a query:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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$person = ORM::for_table('person')
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->where_equal('zipcode', 55555)
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->delete_many();
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