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PSDI Army
yii2
Commits
63bb6efb
Commit
63bb6efb
authored
Jan 17, 2013
by
Alexander Makarov
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wording fixes for AR docs
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ActiveRecord-find.md
docs/api/db/ActiveRecord-find.md
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ActiveRecord.md
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docs/api/db/ActiveRecord-find.md
View file @
63bb6efb
The returned
[
[ActiveQuery
]
] instance can be further customized by calling
methods defined in
[
[ActiveQuery
]
] before returning the populated active records.
Below are some examples:
methods defined in
[
[ActiveQuery
]
] before
`one()`
,
`all()`
or
`value()`
is
called to return the populated active records:
~~~
// find all customers
$customers = Customer::find()->all();
// find all active customers and order them by their age:
$customers = Customer::find()
->where(array('status' => 1))
->orderBy('age')
->all();
// find a single customer whose primary key value is 10
$customer = Customer::find(10);
// the above is equivalent to:
$customer = Customer::find()->where(array('id' => 10))->one();
// find a single customer whose age is 30 and whose status is 1
$customer = Customer::find(array('age' => 30, 'status' => 1));
// the above is equivalent to:
$customer = Customer::find()->where(array('age' => 30, 'status' => 1))->one();
~~~
~~~
\ No newline at end of file
docs/api/db/ActiveRecord.md
View file @
63bb6efb
ActiveRecord implements the
[
Active Record design pattern
](
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_record
)
.
An ActiveRecord object is associated with a row in a database table. For example, a
`Customer`
object
is associated with a row in the
`tbl_customer`
table. Instead of writing raw SQL statements to access
the data in the table, one can call intuitive methods available in the corresponding ActiveRecord class
The idea is that ActiveRecord object is associated with a row in a database table
so object properties are mapped to colums of the corresponding database row.
For example, a
`Customer`
object is associated with a row in the
`tbl_customer`
table. Instead of writing raw SQL statements to access the data in the table,
you can call intuitive methods available in the corresponding ActiveRecord class
to achieve the same goals. For example, calling
[
[save()
]
] would insert or update a row
in the underlying table.
in the underlying table:
~~~
$customer = new Customer();
$customer->name = 'Qiang';
$customer->save();
~~~
### Declaring ActiveRecord Classes
An ActiveRecord class is declared by extending
[
[\yii\db\ActiveRecord
]
]. It typically requires the following
minimal code
:
To declare an ActiveRecord class you need to extend
[
[\yii\db\ActiveRecord
]
] and
implement
`tableName`
method like the following
:
~~~
class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
...
...
@@ -24,12 +32,12 @@ class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
}
~~~
### Connecting to Database
ActiveRecord relies on a
[
[Connection|DB connection
]
] to perform DB-related operations. By default,
it assumes that an application component named
`db`
gives the needed
[
[Connection
]
] instance
which serves as the DB connection. The following application configuration shows an example:
ActiveRecord relies on a
[
[Connection|DB connection
]
]. By default, it assumes that
there is an application component named
`db`
that gives the needed
[
[Connection
]
]
instance which serves as the DB connection. Usually this component is configured
via application configuration like the following:
~~~
return array(
...
...
@@ -47,9 +55,9 @@ return array(
~~~
###
Retriev
ing Data from Database
###
Gett
ing Data from Database
ActiveRecord provides three methods for data retrieval purpose
:
There are three ActiveRecord methods for getting data
:
-
[
[find()
]
]
-
[
[findBySql()
]
]
...
...
@@ -96,7 +104,7 @@ $customers = Customer::find()->indexBy('id')->all();
### Accessing Column Data
ActiveRecord maps each column
in the associated row of database table
to an
*attribute*
in the ActiveRecord
ActiveRecord maps each column
of the corresponding database table row
to an
*attribute*
in the ActiveRecord
object. An attribute is like a regular object property whose name is the same as the corresponding column
name and is case sensitive.
...
...
@@ -109,7 +117,7 @@ $id = $customer->id;
$id = $customer->getAttribute('id');
~~~
And through the
[
[attributes
]
] property, we can get all column values
:
We can get all column values through the
[
[attributes
]
] property
:
~~~
$values = $customer->attributes;
...
...
@@ -118,7 +126,7 @@ $values = $customer->attributes;
### Persisting Data to Database
ActiveRecord provides the following methods to
support data insertion, updating and deletion
:
ActiveRecord provides the following methods to
insert, update and delete data
:
-
[
[save()
]
]
-
[
[insert()
]
]
...
...
@@ -151,14 +159,14 @@ $customer = Customer::find($id);
$customer->delete();
// to increment the age of all customers by 1
Customer::updateAllCounters(array('age' => 1));
Customer::updateAllCounters(array('age' =>
+
1));
~~~
###
Retriev
ing Relational Data
###
Gett
ing Relational Data
ActiveRecord supports foreign key relationships by exposing them via component
properties. For example,
with a
ppropriate declaration, the expression
`$customer->orders`
can return an array of
`Order`
objects
Using ActiveRecord you can expose relationships as
properties. For example,
with a
n appropriate declaration,
`$customer->orders`
can return an array of
`Order`
objects
which represent the orders placed by the specified customer.
To declare a relationship, define a getter method which returns an
[
[ActiveRelation
]
] object. For example,
...
...
@@ -181,30 +189,35 @@ class Order extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
}
~~~
Within the getter methods, we call
[
[hasMany()
]
] or
[
[hasOne()
]
] to create a new
[
[ActiveRelation
]
] object.
The
[
[hasMany()
]
] method declares a one-many relationship. For example, a customer has many orders.
And the
[
[hasOne()
]
] method declares a many-one or one-one relationship. For example, an order has one customer.
Within the getter methods above, we call
[
[hasMany()
]
] or
[
[hasOne()
]
] methods to
create a new
[
[ActiveRelation
]
] object. The
[
[hasMany()
]
] method declares
a one-many relationship. For example, a customer has many orders. And the
[
[hasOne()
]
]
method declares a many-one or one-one relationship. For example, an order has one customer.
Both methods take two parameters:
-
`$class`
: the
class name of the related models. If the class name is not namespaced, it will take
the same namespace as
the declaring class.
-
`$class`
: the
name of the class related models should use. If specified without
a namespace, the namespace will be taken from
the declaring class.
-
`$link`
: the association between columns from two tables. This should be given as an array.
The keys of the array are the names of the columns from the table associated with
`$class`
,
while the values of the array the names of the columns from the declaring class.
while the values of the array are the names of the columns from the declaring class.
It is a good practice to define relationships based on table foreign keys.
Retrieving relational data is now as easy as accessing a component property. Remember that a component
property is defined by the existence of a getter method. The The following example
shows how to get the orders of a customer, and how to get the customer of the first order.
After declaring relationships getting relational data is as easy as accessing
a component property that is defined by the getter method:
~~~
// the orders of a customer
$customer = Customer::find($id);
$orders = $customer->orders; // $orders is an array of Order objects
// the customer of the first order
$customer2 = $orders[0]->customer; // $customer == $customer2
~~~
Because
[
[ActiveRelation
]
] extends from
[
[ActiveQuery
]
], it has the same query customization methods,
which allows us to customize the query for retrieving the related objects. For example, we may declare a
`bigOrder`
relationship which returns orders whose subtotal exceeds certain amount:
Because
[
[ActiveRelation
]
] extends from
[
[ActiveQuery
]
], it has the same query building methods,
which allows us to customize the query for retrieving the related objects.
For example, we may declare a
`bigOrders`
relationship which returns orders whose
subtotal exceeds certain amount:
~~~
class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
...
...
@@ -238,7 +251,7 @@ class Order extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
}
~~~
Method
[
[ActiveRelation::via()
]
]
is similar to
[
[ActiveRelation::viaTable()
]
] except that
[
[ActiveRelation::via()
]
] method
is similar to
[
[ActiveRelation::viaTable()
]
] except that
the first parameter of
[
[ActiveRelation::via()
]
] takes a relation name declared in the ActiveRecord class.
For example, the above
`items`
relation can be equivalently declared as follows:
...
...
@@ -259,9 +272,9 @@ class Order extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
~~~
When
we access the related objects the first time, behind the scene ActiveRecord will perform
a DB query
to retrieve the corresponding data and populate
them into the related objects. No query will be perform
if
we access again the same related objects
. We call this
*lazy loading*
. For example,
When
you access the related objects the first time, behind the scene ActiveRecord performs
a DB query
to retrieve the corresponding data and populate
it into the related objects. No query will be performed
if
you access the same related objects again
. We call this
*lazy loading*
. For example,
~~~
// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer WHERE id=1
...
...
@@ -273,7 +286,8 @@ $orders2 = $customer->orders;
~~~
Lazy loading is convenient to use. However, it may suffer from performance issue in the following scenario:
Lazy loading is very convenient to use. However, it may suffer from performance
issue in the following scenario:
~~~
// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer LIMIT 100
...
...
@@ -287,10 +301,10 @@ foreach ($customers as $customer) {
~~~
How many SQL queries will be performed in the above code, assuming there are more than 100 customers in
the database? 101! The first SQL query brings back 100 customers. Then for each customer, a SQL query
the database? 101! The first SQL query brings back 100 customers. Then for each customer, a
nother
SQL query
is performed to bring back the customer's orders.
To solve the above performance problem,
we
can use the so-called
*eager loading*
by calling
[
[ActiveQuery::with()
]
]:
To solve the above performance problem,
you
can use the so-called
*eager loading*
by calling
[
[ActiveQuery::with()
]
]:
~~~
// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer LIMIT 100
...
...
@@ -305,11 +319,11 @@ foreach ($customers as $customer) {
}
~~~
As
we can see, only two SQL queries a
re needed for the same task.
As
you can see, only two SQL queries we
re needed for the same task.
Sometimes,
we may want to customize the relational queries on the fly. This can be done for both
lazy loading and eager loading. For example,
Sometimes,
you may want to customize the relational queries on the fly. It can be
done for both
lazy loading and eager loading. For example,
~~~
$customer = Customer::find(1);
...
...
@@ -326,10 +340,10 @@ $customers = Customer::find()->limit(100)->with(array(
~~~
###
Maintaining
Relationships
###
Working with
Relationships
ActiveRecord provides the following two methods for establishing and breaking
relationship
between two ActiveRecord objects:
ActiveRecord provides the following two methods for establishing and breaking
a
relationship
between two ActiveRecord objects:
-
[
[link()
]
]
-
[
[unlink()
]
]
...
...
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