NAME
SQL::Format - Yet another yet another SQL builder
SYNOPSIS
use SQL::Format;
my ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf 'SELECT %c FROM %t WHERE %w' => (
[qw/bar baz/], # %c
'foo', # %t
{
hoge => 'fuga',
piyo => [qw/100 200 300/],
}, # %w
);
# $stmt: SELECT `bar`, `baz` FROM `foo` WHERE (`hoge` = ?) AND (`piyo` IN (?, ?, ?))
# @bind: ('fuga', 100, 200, 300);
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf 'SELECT %c FROM %t WHERE %w %o' => (
'*', # %c
'foo', # %t
{ hoge => 'fuga' }, # w
{
order_by => { bar => 'DESC' },
limit => 100,
offset => 10,
}, # %o
);
# $stmt: SELECT * FROM `foo` WHERE (`hoge` = ?) ORDER BY `bar` DESC LIMIT 100 OFFSET 10
# @bind: (`fuga`)
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf 'UPDATE %t SET %s' => (
foo => { bar => 'baz', 'hoge => 'fuga' },
);
# $stmt: UPDATE `foo` SET `bar` = ?, `hoge` = ?
# @bind: ('baz', 'fuga')
my $sqlf = SQL::Format->new(
quote_char => '', # do not quote
limit_dialect => 'LimitXY', # mysql style limit-offset
);
($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->select(foo => [qw/bar baz/], {
hoge => 'fuga',
}, {
order_by => 'bar',
limit => 100,
offset => 10,
});
# $stmt: SELECT bar, baz FROM foo WHERE (hoge = ?) ORDER BY bar LIMIT 10, 100
# @bind: ('fuga')
($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert(foo => { bar => 'baz', hoge => 'fuga' });
# $stmt: INSERT INTO foo (bar, hoge) VALUES (?, ?)
# @bind: ('baz', 'fuga')
($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->update(foo => { bar => 'xxx' }, { hoge => 'fuga' });
# $stmt: UPDATE foo SET bar = ? WHERE hoge = ?
# @bind: ('xxx', 'fuga')
($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->delete(foo => { hoge => 'fuga' });
# $stmt: DELETE FROM foo WHERE (hoge = ?)
# @bind: ('fuga')
DESCRIPTION
SQL::Format is a easy to SQL query building library.
THIS MODULE IS ALPHA LEVEL INTERFACE!!
FUNCTIONS
sqlf($format, @args)
Generate SQL from formatted output conversion.
my ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf 'SELECT %c FROM %t WHERE %w' => (
[qw/bar baz/], # %c
'foo', # %t
{
hoge => 'fuga',
piyo => [100, 200, 300],
}, # %w
);
# $stmt: SELECT `foo` FROM `bar`, `baz WHERE (`hoge` = ?) AND (`piyo` IN (?, ?, ?))
# @bind: ('fuga', 100, 200, 300)
Currently implemented formatters are:
- %t
-
This format is a table name.
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%t', 'table_name'; # $stmt => `table_name` ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%t', [qw/tableA tableB/]; # $stmt => `tableA`, `tableB` ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%t', { tableA => 't1' }; # $stmt => `tableA` `t1` ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%t', { tableA => { index => { type => 'force', keys => [qw/key1 key2/] }, alias => 't1', }; # $stmt: `tableA` `t1` FORCE INDEX (`key1`, `key2`)
- %c
-
This format is a column name.
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%c', 'column_name'; # $stmt => `column_name` ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%c', [qw/colA colB/]; # $stmt => `colA`, `colB` ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%c', '*'; # $stmt => * ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%c', [\'COUNT(*)', colC]; # $stmt => COUNT(*), `colC`
- %w
-
This format is a where clause.
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%w', { foo => 'bar' }; # $stmt: (`foo` = ?) # @bind: ("bar") ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%w', { foo => 'bar', baz => [qw/100 200 300/], }; # $stmt: (`baz` IN (?, ?, ?) AND (`foo` = ?) # @bind: (100, 200, 300, 'bar')
- %o
-
This format is a options. Currently specified are:
- limit
-
This option makes
LIMIT $n
clause.($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { limit => 100 }; # $stmt => LIMIT 100
- offset
-
This option makes
OFFSET $n
clause. You must be specified both limit option.($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { limit => 100, offset => 20 }; # $stmt => LIMIT 100 OFFSET 20
You can change limit dialects from
$SQL::Format::LIMIT_DIALECT
. - order_by
-
This option makes
ORDER BY
clause.($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { order_by => 'foo' }; # $stmt => ORDER BY `foo` ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { order_by => { foo => 'DESC' } }; # $stmt => ORDER BY `foo` DESC ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { order_by => ['foo', { -asc => 'bar' } ] }; # $stmt => ORDER BY `foo`, `bar` ASC
- group_by
-
This option makes
GROUP BY
clause. Argument value some asorder_by
option.($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { group_by => { foo => 'DESC' } }; # $stmt => GROUP BY `foo` DESC
- having
-
This option makes
HAVING
clause. Argument value some aswhere
clause.($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%o', { having => { foo => 'bar' } }; # $stmt: HAVING (`foo` = ?) # @bind: ('bar')
- %j
-
This format is join clause.
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%j', { table => 'bar', condition => 'foo.id = bar.id' }; # $stmt: INNER JOIN `bar` ON (foo.id = bar.id) ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%j', { type => 'left', table => { bar => 'b' }, condition => { 'f.id' => 'b.id', 'f.updated_at' => \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP()', '2012-12-12'] 'f.created_at' => { '>' => 'b.created_at' }, }, }; # $stmt: LEFT JOIN `bar` `b` ON (`f`.`id` = `b.id`)
- %s
-
This format is set clause.
($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%s', { bar => 'baz' }; # $stmt: `bar` = ? # @bind: ('baz') ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%s', { bar => 'baz', 'hoge' => \'UNIX_TIMESTAMP()' }; # $stmt: `bar` = ?, `hoge` = UNIX_TIMESTAMP() # @bind: ('baz') ($stmt, @bind) = sqlf '%s', { bar => 'baz', hoge => \['CONCAT(?, ?)', 'ya', 'ppo'], }; # $stmt: `bar` = ?, `hoge` = CONCAT(?, ?) # @bind: ('baz', 'ya', 'ppo')
For more examples, see also SQL::Format::Spec.
You can change the behavior by changing the global variable.
- $SQL::Format::QUOTE_CHAR : Str
-
This is a quote character for table or column name.
Default value is
"`"
. - $SQL::Format::NAME_SEP : Str
-
This is a separate character for table or column name.
Default value is
"."
. - $SQL::Format::DELIMITER Str
-
This is a delimiter for between columns.
Default value is
", "
. - $SQL::Format::LIMIT_DIALECT : Str
-
This is a types for dialects of limit-offset.
You can choose are:
LimitOffset # LIMIT 100 OFFSET 20 (SQLite / PostgreSQL / MySQL) LimitXY # LIMIT 20, 100 (MySQL / SQLite) LimitYX # LIMIT 100, 20 (other)
Default value is
LimitOffset"
.
METHODS
new([%options])
Create a new instance of SQL::Format
.
my $sqlf = SQL::Format->new(
quote_char => '',
limit_dialect => 'LimitXY',
);
%options
specify are:
- quote_char : Str
-
Default value is
$SQL::Format::QUOTE_CHAR
. - name_sep : Str
-
This is a separate character for table or column name.
Default value is
$SQL::Format::NAME_SEP
. - delimiter: Str
-
This is a delimiter for between columns.
Default value is
$SQL::Format::DELIMITER
. - limit_dialect : Str
-
This is a types for dialects of limit-offset.
Default value is
$SQL::Format::LIMIT_DIALECT
.
format($format, \%args)
This method same as sqlf
function.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $self->format('SELECT %c FROM %t WHERE %w',
[qw/bar baz/],
'foo',
{ hoge => 'fuga' },
);
# $stmt: SELECT `bar`, `baz` FROM ` foo` WHERE (`hoge` = ?)
# @bind: ('fuga')
select($table|\@table, $column|\@columns [, \%where, \%opts ])
This method returns SQL string and bind parameters for SELECT
statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->select(foo => [qw/bar baz/], {
hoge => 'fuga',
piyo => [100, 200, 300],
});
# $stmt: SELECT `foo` FROM `bar`, `baz` WHERE (`hoge` = ?) AND (`piyo` IN (?, ?, ?))
# @bind: ('fuga', 100, 200, 300)
Argument details are:
- $table | \@table
-
Same as
%t
format. - $column | \@columns
-
Same as
%c
format. - \%where
-
Same as
%w
format. - \%opts
-
- $opts->{prefix}
-
This is prefix for SELECT statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->select(foo => '*', { bar => 'baz' }, { prefix => 'SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS' }); # $stmt: SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS * FROM `foo` WHERE (`bar` = ?) # @bind: ('baz')
Default value is
SELECT
. - $opts->{suffix}
-
Additional value for after the SELECT statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->select(foo => '*', { bar => 'baz' }, { suffix => 'FOR UPDATE' }); # $stmt: SELECT * FROM `foo` WHERE (bar = ?) FOR UPDATE # @bind: ('baz')
Default value is
''
- $opts->{for_update}
-
Alias for
$opts-
{suffix} = 'FOR UPDATE';>.This option provides compatibility with SQL::Maker.
- $opts->{limit}
- $opts->{offset}
- $opts->{order_by}
- $opts->{group_by}
- $opts->{having}
- $opts->{join}
-
See also
%o
format.
insert($table, \%values|\@values [, \%opts ])
This method returns SQL string and bind parameters for INSERT
statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert(foo => { bar => 'baz', hoge => 'fuga' });
# $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`bar`, `hoge`) VALUES (?, ?)
# @bind: ('baz', 'fuga')
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert(foo => [
hoge => \'NOW()',
fuga => \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP()', '2012-12-12 12:12:12'],
]);
# $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`hoge`, `fuga`) VALUES (NOW(), UNIX_TIMESTAMP(?))
# @bind: ('2012-12-12 12:12:12')
Argument details are:
- $table
-
This is a table name for target of INSERT.
- \%values | \@values
-
This is a VALUES clause INSERT statement.
Currently supported types are:
# \%values case { foo => 'bar' } { foo => \'NOW()' } { foo => \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP()', '2012-12-12 12:12:12'] } # \@values case [ foo => 'bar' ] [ foo => \'NOW()' ] [ foo => \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP()', '2012-12-12 12:12:12'] ]
- \%opts
update($table, \%set|\@set [, \%where, \%opts ])
This method returns SQL string and bind parameters for UPDATE
statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->update(foo => { bar => 'baz' }, { hoge => 'fuga' });
# $stmt: UPDATE `foo` SET `bar` = ? WHERE (`hoge` = ?)
# @bind: ('baz', 'fuga')
Argument details are:
- $table
-
This is a table name for target of UPDATE.
- \%set | \@set
-
This is a SET clause for INSERT statement.
Currently supported types are:
# \%values case { foo => 'bar' } { foo => \'NOW()' } { foo => \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP()', '2012-12-12 12:12:12'] } # \@values case [ foo => 'bar' ] [ foo => \'NOW()' ] [ foo => \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP()', '2012-12-12 12:12:12'] ]
- \%where
-
Same as
%w
format. - \%opts
-
- $opts->{prefix}
-
This is a prefix for UPDATE statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->update( 'foo' # table { bar => 'baz' }, # sets { hoge => 'fuga' }, # where { prefix => 'UPDATE LOW_PRIORITY' }, # opts ); # $stmt: UPDATE LOW_PRIORITY `foo` SET `bar` = ? WHERE (`hoge` = ?) # @bind: ('baz', 'fuga')
Default value is
UPDATE
. - $opts->{order_by}
- $opts->{limit}
-
See also
%o
format.
delete($table [, \%where, \%opts ])
This method returns SQL string and bind parameters for DELETE
statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->delete(foo => { bar => 'baz' });
# $stmt: DELETE FROM `foo` WHERE (`bar = ?)
# @bind: ('baz')
Argument details are:
- $table
-
This is a table name for target of DELETE.
- \%where
-
Same as
%w
format. - \%opts
-
- $opts->{prefix}
-
This is a prefix for DELETE statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->delete(foo => { bar => 'baz' }, { prefix => 'DELETE LOW_PRIORITY' }); # $stmt: DELETE LOW_PRIORITY FROM `foo` WHERE (`bar` = ?) # @bind: ('baz')
Default value is
DELETE
. - $opts->{order_by}
- $opts->{limit}
-
See also
%o
format.
insert_multi($table, \@cols, \@values [, \%opts])
This method returns SQL string and bind parameters for bulk insert.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $self->insert_multi(
foo => [qw/bar baz/],
[
[qw/hoge fuga/],
[qw/fizz buzz/],
],
);
# $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`bar`, `baz`) VALUES (?, ?), (?, ?)
# @bind: (qw/hoge fuga fizz buzz/)
Argument details are:
- $table
-
This is a table name for target of INSERT.
- \@cols
-
This is a columns for target of INSERT.
- \@values
-
This is a values parameters. Must be ARRAY within ARRAY.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert_multi( foo => [qw/bar baz/], [ [qw/foo bar/], [\'NOW()', \['UNIX_TIMESTAMP(?)', '2012-12-12 12:12:12'] ], ], ); # $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`bar`, `baz`) VALUES (?, ?), (NOW(), UNIX_TIMESTAMP(?)) # @bind: (qw/foo bar/, '2012-12-12 12:12:12')
- \%opts
-
- $opts->{prefix}
-
This is a prefix for INSERT statement.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert_multi(..., { prefix => 'INSERT IGNORE INTO' }); # $stmt: INSERT IGNORE INTO ...
Default value is
INSERT INTO
. - $opts->{update}
-
Some as
%s
format.If this value specified then add
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statement.my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert_multi( foo => [qw/bar baz/], [ [qw/hoge fuga/], [qw/fizz buzz/], ], { update => { bar => 'piyo' } }, ); # $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`bar`, `baz`) VALUES (?, ?), (?, ?) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE `bar` = ? # @bind: (qw/hoge fuga fizz buzz piyo/)
insert_multi_from_hash($table, \@values [, \%opts])
This method is a wrapper for insert_multi()
.
Argument dialects are:
- $table
-
Same as
insert_multi()
- \@values
-
This is a values parameters. Must be HASH within ARRAY.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert_multi_from_hash(foo => [ { bar => 'hoge', baz => 'fuga' }, { bar => 'fizz', baz => 'buzz' }, ]); # $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`bar`, `baz`) VALUES (?, ?), (?, ?) # @bind: (qw/hoge fuga fizz buzz/)
- \%opts
-
Same as
insert_multi()
insert_on_duplicate($table, \%values|\@values, \%update_values|\@update_values [, \%opts])
This method generate "INSERT INTO ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE" query for MySQL.
my ($stmt, @bind) = $sqlf->insert_on_duplicate(
foo => {
bar => 'hoge',
baz => 'fuga',
}, {
bar => \'VALUES(bar)',
baz => 'piyo',
},
);
# $stmt: INSERT INTO `foo` (`bar`, `baz`) VALUES (?, ?) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE `bar` = VALUES(bar), baz = 'piyo'
# @bind: (qw/hoge fuga piyo/)
Argument details are:
- $table
-
This is a table name for target of INSERT.
- \%values|\@values
-
This is a values parameters.
- \%update_values|\@update_values
-
This is a ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE parameters.
- \%opts
AUTHOR
xaicron <xaicron {at} cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2012 - xaicron
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.