Interface QueryInterface
The basis for every query object
Method Summary
-
aliasField() public
Returns a key => value array representing a single aliased field that can be passed directly to the select() method. The key will contain the alias and the value the actual field name.
-
aliasFields() public
Runs
aliasField()
for each field in the provided list and returns the result under a single array. -
all() public
Fetch the results for this query.
-
andWhere() public @method
-
applyOptions() public
Populates or adds parts to current query clauses using an array. This is handy for passing all query clauses at once. The option array accepts:
-
count() public
Returns the total amount of results for the query.
-
find() public
Apply custom finds to against an existing query object.
-
first() public
Returns the first result out of executing this query, if the query has not been executed before, it will set the limit clause to 1 for performance reasons.
-
limit() public
Sets the number of records that should be retrieved from database, accepts an integer or an expression object that evaluates to an integer. In some databases, this operation might not be supported or will require the query to be transformed in order to limit the result set size.
-
offset() public
Sets the number of records that should be skipped from the original result set This is commonly used for paginating large results. Accepts an integer or an expression object that evaluates to an integer.
-
order() public
Adds a single or multiple fields to be used in the ORDER clause for this query. Fields can be passed as an array of strings, array of expression objects, a single expression or a single string.
-
page() public
Set the page of results you want.
-
repository() public
Returns the default repository object that will be used by this query, that is, the repository that will appear in the from clause.
-
select() public @method
-
toArray() public
Returns an array representation of the results after executing the query.
-
where() public
Adds a condition or set of conditions to be used in the WHERE clause for this query. Conditions can be expressed as an array of fields as keys with comparison operators in it, the values for the array will be used for comparing the field to such literal. Finally, conditions can be expressed as a single string or an array of strings.
Method Detail
aliasField() ¶ public
aliasField(string $field, string|null $alias = null): string
Returns a key => value array representing a single aliased field that can be passed directly to the select() method. The key will contain the alias and the value the actual field name.
If the field is already aliased, then it will not be changed. If no $alias is passed, the default table for this query will be used.
Parameters
-
string
$field The field to alias
-
string|null
$alias optional the alias used to prefix the field
Returns
string
aliasFields() ¶ public
aliasFields(array $fields, string|null $defaultAlias = null): string[]
Runs aliasField()
for each field in the provided list and returns
the result under a single array.
Parameters
-
array
$fields The fields to alias
-
string|null
$defaultAlias optional The default alias
Returns
string[]
all() ¶ public
all(): Cake\Datasource\ResultSetInterface
Fetch the results for this query.
Will return either the results set through setResult(), or execute this query and return the ResultSetDecorator object ready for streaming of results.
ResultSetDecorator is a traversable object that implements the methods found on Cake\Collection\Collection.
Returns
Cake\Datasource\ResultSetInterface
andWhere() ¶ public @method
andWhere(mixed $conditions, mixed $types = []): $this
Parameters
-
$conditions
-
$types optional
Returns
$this
applyOptions() ¶ public
applyOptions(array $options): $this
Populates or adds parts to current query clauses using an array. This is handy for passing all query clauses at once. The option array accepts:
- fields: Maps to the select method
- conditions: Maps to the where method
- limit: Maps to the limit method
- order: Maps to the order method
- offset: Maps to the offset method
- group: Maps to the group method
- having: Maps to the having method
- contain: Maps to the contain options for eager loading
- join: Maps to the join method
- page: Maps to the page method
Example:
$query->applyOptions([
'fields' => ['id', 'name'],
'conditions' => [
'created >=' => '2013-01-01'
],
'limit' => 10
]);
Is equivalent to:
$query
->select(['id', 'name'])
->where(['created >=' => '2013-01-01'])
->limit(10)
Parameters
-
array
$options list of query clauses to apply new parts to.
Returns
$this
find() ¶ public
find(string $finder, array $options = []): $this
Apply custom finds to against an existing query object.
Allows custom find methods to be combined and applied to each other.
$repository->find('all')->find('recent');
The above is an example of stacking multiple finder methods onto a single query.
Parameters
-
string
$finder The finder method to use.
-
array
$options optional The options for the finder.
Returns
$this
first() ¶ public
first(): mixed
Returns the first result out of executing this query, if the query has not been executed before, it will set the limit clause to 1 for performance reasons.
Example:
$singleUser = $query->select(['id', 'username'])->first();
Returns
mixed
limit() ¶ public
limit(int $num): $this
Sets the number of records that should be retrieved from database, accepts an integer or an expression object that evaluates to an integer. In some databases, this operation might not be supported or will require the query to be transformed in order to limit the result set size.
Examples
$query->limit(10) // generates LIMIT 10
$query->limit($query->newExpr()->add(['1 + 1'])); // LIMIT (1 + 1)
Parameters
-
int
$num number of records to be returned
Returns
$this
offset() ¶ public
offset(int $num): $this
Sets the number of records that should be skipped from the original result set This is commonly used for paginating large results. Accepts an integer or an expression object that evaluates to an integer.
In some databases, this operation might not be supported or will require the query to be transformed in order to limit the result set size.
Examples
$query->offset(10) // generates OFFSET 10
$query->offset($query->newExpr()->add(['1 + 1'])); // OFFSET (1 + 1)
Parameters
-
int
$num number of records to be skipped
Returns
$this
order() ¶ public
order(array|string $fields, bool $overwrite = false): $this
Adds a single or multiple fields to be used in the ORDER clause for this query. Fields can be passed as an array of strings, array of expression objects, a single expression or a single string.
If an array is passed, keys will be used as the field itself and the value will represent the order in which such field should be ordered. When called multiple times with the same fields as key, the last order definition will prevail over the others.
By default this function will append any passed argument to the list of fields to be selected, unless the second argument is set to true.
Examples:
$query->order(['title' => 'DESC', 'author_id' => 'ASC']);
Produces:
ORDER BY title DESC, author_id ASC
$query->order(['title' => 'DESC NULLS FIRST'])->order('author_id');
Will generate:
ORDER BY title DESC NULLS FIRST, author_id
$expression = $query->newExpr()->add(['id % 2 = 0']);
$query->order($expression)->order(['title' => 'ASC']);
Will become:
ORDER BY (id %2 = 0), title ASC
If you need to set complex expressions as order conditions, you
should use orderAsc()
or orderDesc()
.
Parameters
-
array|string
$fields fields to be added to the list
-
bool
$overwrite optional whether to reset order with field list or not
Returns
$this
page() ¶ public
page(int $num, int|null $limit = null): $this
Set the page of results you want.
This method provides an easier to use interface to set the limit + offset
in the record set you want as results. If empty the limit will default to
the existing limit clause, and if that too is empty, then 25
will be used.
Pages should start at 1.
Parameters
-
int
$num The page number you want.
-
int|null
$limit optional The number of rows you want in the page. If null the current limit clause will be used.
Returns
$this
repository() ¶ public
repository(Cake\Datasource\RepositoryInterface|null $repository = null): Cake\Datasource\RepositoryInterface|$this
Returns the default repository object that will be used by this query, that is, the repository that will appear in the from clause.
Parameters
-
Cake\Datasource\RepositoryInterface|null
$repository optional The default repository object to use
Returns
Cake\Datasource\RepositoryInterface|$this
select() ¶ public @method
select(mixed $fields = [], mixed $overwrite = false): $this
Parameters
-
$fields optional
-
$overwrite optional
Returns
$this
toArray() ¶ public
toArray(): array
Returns an array representation of the results after executing the query.
Returns
array
where() ¶ public
where(string|array|callable|null $conditions = null, array $types = [], bool $overwrite = false): $this
Adds a condition or set of conditions to be used in the WHERE clause for this query. Conditions can be expressed as an array of fields as keys with comparison operators in it, the values for the array will be used for comparing the field to such literal. Finally, conditions can be expressed as a single string or an array of strings.
When using arrays, each entry will be joined to the rest of the conditions using an AND operator. Consecutive calls to this function will also join the new conditions specified using the AND operator. Additionally, values can be expressed using expression objects which can include other query objects.
Any conditions created with this methods can be used with any SELECT, UPDATE and DELETE type of queries.
Conditions using operators:
$query->where([
'posted >=' => new DateTime('3 days ago'),
'title LIKE' => 'Hello W%',
'author_id' => 1,
], ['posted' => 'datetime']);
The previous example produces:
WHERE posted >= 2012-01-27 AND title LIKE 'Hello W%' AND author_id = 1
Second parameter is used to specify what type is expected for each passed key. Valid types can be used from the mapped with Database\Type class.
Nesting conditions with conjunctions:
$query->where([
'author_id !=' => 1,
'OR' => ['published' => true, 'posted <' => new DateTime('now')],
'NOT' => ['title' => 'Hello']
], ['published' => boolean, 'posted' => 'datetime']
The previous example produces:
WHERE author_id = 1 AND (published = 1 OR posted < '2012-02-01') AND NOT (title = 'Hello')
You can nest conditions using conjunctions as much as you like. Sometimes, you may want to define 2 different options for the same key, in that case, you can wrap each condition inside a new array:
$query->where(['OR' => [['published' => false], ['published' => true]])
Keep in mind that every time you call where() with the third param set to false (default), it will join the passed conditions to the previous stored list using the AND operator. Also, using the same array key twice in consecutive calls to this method will not override the previous value.
Using expressions objects:
$exp = $query->newExpr()->add(['id !=' => 100, 'author_id' != 1])->tieWith('OR');
$query->where(['published' => true], ['published' => 'boolean'])->where($exp);
The previous example produces:
WHERE (id != 100 OR author_id != 1) AND published = 1
Other Query objects that be used as conditions for any field.
Adding conditions in multiple steps:
You can use callable functions to construct complex expressions, functions receive as first argument a new QueryExpression object and this query instance as second argument. Functions must return an expression object, that will be added the list of conditions for the query using the AND operator.
$query
->where(['title !=' => 'Hello World'])
->where(function ($exp, $query) {
$or = $exp->or_(['id' => 1]);
$and = $exp->and_(['id >' => 2, 'id <' => 10]);
return $or->add($and);
});
- The previous example produces:
WHERE title != 'Hello World' AND (id = 1 OR (id > 2 AND id < 10))
Conditions as strings:
$query->where(['articles.author_id = authors.id', 'modified IS NULL']);
The previous example produces:
WHERE articles.author_id = authors.id AND modified IS NULL
Please note that when using the array notation or the expression objects, all values will be correctly quoted and transformed to the correspondent database data type automatically for you, thus securing your application from SQL injections. If you use string conditions make sure that your values are correctly quoted. The safest thing you can do is to never use string conditions.
Parameters
-
string|array|callable|null
$conditions optional The conditions to filter on.
-
array
$types optional associative array of type names used to bind values to query
-
bool
$overwrite optional whether to reset conditions with passed list or not
Returns
$this