added DBIx::Custom::Guides
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=head1 NAME |
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DBIx::Custom::Guides - DBIx::Custom Guides |
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=head1 GUIDES |
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=head2 1. Connect to the database |
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C<connect()> method create a new L<DBIx::Custom> |
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object and connect to the database. |
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use DBIx::Custom; |
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my $dbi = DBIx::Custom->connect(data_source => "dbi:mysql:database=dbname", |
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user => 'ken', password => '!LFKD%$&'); |
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deprecated DBIx::Custom::MyS...
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B<Data source exmaples:> |
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MySQL |
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"dbi:mysql:database=$database" |
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"dbi:mysql:database=$database;host=$hostname;port=$port" |
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SQLite |
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"dbi:SQLite:dbname=$database" |
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"dbi:SQLite:dbname=:memory:" |
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PostgreSQL |
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"dbi:Pg:dbname=$dbname" |
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Oracle |
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"dbi:Oracle:$dbname" |
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"dbi:Oracle:host=$host;sid=$sid" |
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ODBC(Microsoft Access) |
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"dbi:ODBC:driver=Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb);dbq=hoge.mdb" |
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ODBC(SQL Server) |
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"dbi:ODBC:driver={SQL Server};Server=(local);database=test;Trusted_Connection=yes;AutoTranslate=No;" |
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added DBIx::Custom::Guides
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=head2 2. Suger methods |
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L<DBIx::Custom> has suger methods, such as C<insert()>, C<update()>, |
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C<delete()> or C<select()>. If you want to do small works, |
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You don't have to create SQL statements. |
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=head3 insert() |
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Execute insert statement. |
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$dbi->insert(table => 'books', |
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param => {title => 'Perl', author => 'Ken'}); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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insert into (title, author) values (?, ?); |
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The values of C<title> and C<author> is embedded into the placeholders. |
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C<append> and C<filter> argument can be specified. |
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See also "METHODS" section. |
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=head3 update() |
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Execute update statement. |
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$dbi->update(table => 'books', |
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param => {title => 'Perl', author => 'Ken'}, |
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where => {id => 5}); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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update books set title = ?, author = ?; |
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The values of C<title> and C<author> is embedded into the placeholders. |
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C<append> and C<filter> argument can be specified. |
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See also "METHOD" section. |
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If you want to update all rows, use C<update_all()> method. |
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=head3 delete() |
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Execute delete statement. |
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$dbi->delete(table => 'books', |
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where => {author => 'Ken'}); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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delete from books where id = ?; |
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The value of C<id> is embedded into the placehodler. |
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C<append> and C<filter> argument can be specified. |
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see also "METHODS" section. |
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If you want to delete all rows, use C<delete_all()> method. |
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=head3 select() |
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Execute select statement, only C<table> argument specified : |
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my $result = $dbi->select(table => 'books'); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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select * from books; |
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the result of C<select()> method is L<DBIx::Custom::Result> object. |
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You can fetch a row by C<fetch()> method. |
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while (my $row = $result->fetch) { |
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my $title = $row->[0]; |
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my $author = $row->[1]; |
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} |
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L<DBIx::Custom::Result> has various methods to fetch row. |
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See "3. Fetch row". |
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C<column> and C<where> arguments specified. |
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my $result = $dbi->select( |
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table => 'books', |
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column => [qw/author title/], |
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where => {author => 'Ken'} |
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); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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select author, title from books where author = ?; |
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the value of C<author> is embdded into the placeholder. |
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If you want to join tables, specify C<relation> argument. |
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my $result = $dbi->select( |
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table => ['books', 'rental'], |
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column => ['books.name as book_name'] |
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relation => {'books.id' => 'rental.book_id'} |
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); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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select books.name as book_name from books, rental |
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where books.id = rental.book_id; |
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If you want to add some string to the end of SQL statement, |
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use C<append> argument. |
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my $result = $dbi->select( |
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table => 'books', |
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where => {author => 'Ken'}, |
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append => 'order by price limit 5', |
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); |
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The following SQL is executed. |
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select * books where author = ? order by price limit 5; |
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C<filter> argument can be specified. |
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see also "METHODS" section. |
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=head2 3. Fetch row |
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C<select()> method return L<DBIx::Custom::Result> object. |
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You can fetch row by various methods. |
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Note that in this section, array means array reference, |
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and hash meanse hash reference. |
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Fetch row into array. |
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while (my $row = $result->fetch) { |
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my $author = $row->[0]; |
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my $title = $row->[1]; |
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} |
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Fetch only a first row into array. |
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my $row = $result->fetch_first; |
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Fetch multiple rows into array of array. |
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while (my $rows = $result->fetch_multi(5)) { |
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my $first_author = $rows->[0][0]; |
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my $first_title = $rows->[0][1]; |
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my $second_author = $rows->[1][0]; |
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my $second_value = $rows->[1][1]; |
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} |
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Fetch all rows into array of array. |
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my $rows = $result->fetch_all; |
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Fetch row into hash. |
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# Fetch a row into hash |
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while (my $row = $result->fetch_hash) { |
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my $title = $row->{title}; |
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my $author = $row->{author}; |
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} |
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Fetch only a first row into hash |
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my $row = $result->fetch_hash_first; |
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Fetch multiple rows into array of hash |
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while (my $rows = $result->fetch_hash_multi(5)) { |
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my $first_title = $rows->[0]{title}; |
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my $first_author = $rows->[0]{author}; |
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my $second_title = $rows->[1]{title}; |
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my $second_author = $rows->[1]{author}; |
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} |
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Fetch all rows into array of hash |
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my $rows = $result->fetch_hash_all; |
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If you want to access statement handle of L<DBI>, use C<sth> attribute. |
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my $sth = $result->sth; |
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=head2 4. Hash parameter binding |
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L<DBIx::Custom> provides hash parameter binding. |
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At frist, I show normal parameter binding. |
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use DBI; |
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my $dbh = DBI->connect(...); |
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my $sth = $dbh->prepare( |
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"select * from books where author = ? and title like ?;" |
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); |
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$sth->execute('Ken', '%Perl%'); |
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This is very good way because database system can enable SQL caching, |
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and parameter is quoted automatically. this is secure. |
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L<DBIx::Custom> hash parameter binding system improve |
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normal parameter binding to use hash parameter. |
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my $result = $dbi->execute( |
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"select * from books where {= author} and {like title};" |
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param => {author => 'Ken', title => '%Perl%'} |
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); |
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This is same as the normal way, execpt that the parameter is hash. |
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{= author} and {like title} is called C<tag>. |
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tag is expand to placeholder string internally. |
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select * from books where {= author} and {like title} |
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-> select * from books where author = ? and title like ?; |
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The following tags is available. |
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[TAG] [REPLACED] |
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{? NAME} -> ? |
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{= NAME} -> NAME = ? |
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{<> NAME} -> NAME <> ? |
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{< NAME} -> NAME < ? |
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{> NAME} -> NAME > ? |
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{>= NAME} -> NAME >= ? |
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{<= NAME} -> NAME <= ? |
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{like NAME} -> NAME like ? |
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{in NAME COUNT} -> NAME in [?, ?, ..] |
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{insert_param NAME1 NAME2} -> (NAME1, NAME2) values (?, ?) |
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{update_param NAME1 NAME2} -> set NAME1 = ?, NAME2 = ? |
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See also L<DBIx::Custom::QueryBuilder>. |
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C<{> and C<}> is reserved. If you use these charactors, |
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you must escape them using '\'. Note that '\' is |
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already perl escaped charactor, so you must write '\\'. |
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'select * from books \\{ something statement \\}' |
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=head2 5. Filtering |
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Usually, Perl string is kept as internal string. |
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If you want to save the string to database, You must encode the string. |
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Filtering system help you to convert a data to another data |
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when you save to the data and get the data form database. |
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If you want to register filter, use C<register_filter()> method. |
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$dbi->register_filter( |
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to_upper_case => sub { |
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my $value = shift; |
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return uc $value; |
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} |
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); |
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C<encode_utf8> and C<decode_utf8> filter is registerd by default. |
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You can specify these filters to C<filter> argument of C<execute()> method. |
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my $result = $dbi->execute( |
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"select * from books where {= author} and {like title};" |
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param => {author => 'Ken', title => '%Perl%'}, |
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filter => {author => 'to_upper_case, title => 'encode_utf8'} |
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); |
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C<filter> argument can be specified to suger methods, such as |
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C<insert()>, C<update()>, C<update_all()>, |
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C<delete()>, C<delete_all()>, C<select()>. |
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# insert(), having filter argument |
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$dbi->insert(table => 'books', |
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param => {title => 'Perl', author => 'Ken'}, |
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filter => {title => 'encode_utf8'}); |
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# select(), having filter argument |
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my $result = $dbi->select( |
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table => 'books', |
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column => [qw/author title/], |
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where => {author => 'Ken'}, |
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append => 'order by id limit 1', |
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filter => {title => 'encode_utf8'} |
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); |
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Filter works each parmeter, but you prepare default filter for all parameters. |
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$dbi->default_bind_filter('encode_utf8'); |
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C<filter()> argument overwrites this default filter. |
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$dbi->default_bind_filter('encode_utf8'); |
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$dbi->insert( |
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table => 'books', |
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param => {title => 'Perl', author => 'Ken', price => 1000}, |
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filter => {author => 'to_upper_case', price => undef} |
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); |
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This is same as the following example. |
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$dbi->insert( |
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table => 'books', |
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param => {title => 'Perl', author => 'Ken', price => 1000}, |
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filter => {title => 'encode_uft8' author => 'to_upper_case'} |
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); |
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You can also specify filter when the row is fetched. This is reverse of bind filter. |
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my $result = $dbi->select(table => 'books'); |
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$result->filter({title => 'decode_utf8', author => 'to_upper_case'}); |
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Filter works each column value, but you prepare a default filter |
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for all clumn value. |
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$dbi->default_fetch_filter('decode_utf8'); |
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C<filter()> method of L<DBIx::Custom::Result> |
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overwrites this default filter. |
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$dbi->default_fetch_filter('decode_utf8'); |
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my $result = $dbi->select( |
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table => 'books', |
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columns => ['title', 'author', 'price'] |
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); |
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$result->filter({author => 'to_upper_case', price => undef}); |
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This is same as the following one. |
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my $result = $dbi->select( |
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table => 'books', |
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columns => ['title', 'author', 'price'] |
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); |
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$result->filter({title => 'decode_utf8', author => 'to_upper_case'}); |
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Note that in fetch filter, column names must be lower case |
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even if the column name conatains upper case charactors. |
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This is requirment not to depend database systems. |
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=head2 6. Get high performance |
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=head3 Disable filter checking |
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Filter checking is executed by default. |
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This is done to check right filter name is specified, |
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but sometimes damage performance. |
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If you disable this filter checking, |
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Set C<filter_check> attribute to 0. |
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$dbi->filter_check(0); |
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=head3 Use execute() method instead suger methods |
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If you execute insert statement by C<insert()> method, |
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you sometimes can't get required performance. |
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C<insert()> method is a little slow because SQL statement and statement handle |
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is created every time. |
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In that case, you can prepare a query by C<create_query()> method. |
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my $query = $dbi->create_query( |
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"insert into books {insert_param title author};" |
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); |
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Return value of C<create_query()> is L<DBIx::Custom::Query> object. |
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This keep the information of SQL and column names. |
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{ |
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sql => 'insert into books (title, author) values (?, ?);', |
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columns => ['title', 'author'] |
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} |
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Execute query repeatedly. |
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my $inputs = [ |
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{title => 'Perl', author => 'Ken'}, |
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{title => 'Good days', author => 'Mike'} |
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]; |
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foreach my $input (@$inputs) { |
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$dbi->execute($query, $input); |
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} |
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432 |
This is faster than C<insert()> method. |
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=head3 caching |
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436 |
C<execute()> method caches the parsed result of the source of SQL. |
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Default to 1 |
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438 | ||
439 |
$dbi->cache(1); |
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440 | ||
441 |
Caching is on memory, but you can change this by C<cache_method()>. |
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First argument is L<DBIx::Custom> object. |
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Second argument is a source of SQL, |
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such as "select * from books where {= title} and {= author};"; |
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Third argument is parsed result, such as |
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{sql => "select * from books where title = ? and author = ?", |
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columns => ['title', 'author']}, this is hash reference. |
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If arguments is more than two, this method is called to set cache. |
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If not, this method is called to get cache. |
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450 | ||
451 |
$dbi->cache_method(sub { |
|
452 |
sub { |
|
453 |
my $self = shift; |
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|
455 |
$self->{_cached} ||= {}; |
|
456 |
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|
457 |
# Set cache |
|
458 |
if (@_ > 1) { |
|
459 |
$self->{_cached}{$_[0]} = $_[1] |
|
460 |
} |
|
461 |
|
|
462 |
# Get cache |
|
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else { |
|
464 |
return $self->{_cached}{$_[0]} |
|
465 |
} |
|
466 |
} |
|
467 |
}); |
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468 | ||
469 |
=head2 7. More features |
|
470 | ||
471 |
=head3 Get DBI object |
|
472 | ||
473 |
You can get L<DBI> object and call any method of L<DBI>. |
|
474 | ||
475 |
$dbi->dbh->begin_work; |
|
476 |
$dbi->dbh->commit; |
|
477 |
$dbi->dbh->rollback; |
|
478 | ||
479 |
=head3 Change Result class |
|
480 | ||
481 |
You can change Result class if you need. |
|
482 | ||
483 |
package Your::Result; |
|
484 |
use base 'DBIx::Custom::Result'; |
|
485 |
|
|
486 |
sub some_method { ... } |
|
487 | ||
488 |
1; |
|
489 |
|
|
490 |
package main; |
|
491 |
|
|
492 |
use Your::Result; |
|
493 |
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|
494 |
my $dbi = DBIx::Custom->connect(...); |
|
495 |
$dbi->result_class('Your::Result'); |
|
496 | ||
497 |
=head3 Custamize SQL builder object |
|
498 | ||
499 |
You can custamize SQL builder object |
|
500 | ||
501 |
my $dbi = DBIx::Custom->connect(...); |
|
502 |
$dbi->query_builder->register_tag_processor( |
|
503 |
name => sub { |
|
504 |
... |
|
505 |
} |
|
506 |
); |
|
507 | ||
508 |
=head3 Resister helper method |
|
509 | ||
510 |
You can resiter helper method. |
|
511 | ||
512 |
$dbi->helper( |
|
513 |
update_or_insert => sub { |
|
514 |
my $self = shift; |
|
515 |
# do something |
|
516 |
}, |
|
517 |
find_or_create => sub { |
|
518 |
my $self = shift; |
|
519 |
# do something |
|
520 |
} |
|
521 |
); |
|
522 | ||
523 |
Register helper methods. |
|
524 |
These method can be called from L<DBIx::Custom> object directory. |
|
525 | ||
526 |
$dbi->update_or_insert; |
|
527 |
$dbi->find_or_create; |
|
528 | ||
529 |
=cut |