PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

PDOStatement::fetchObject

(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL pdo >= 0.2.4)

PDOStatement::fetchObjectRécupère la prochaine ligne et la retourne en tant qu'objet

Description

public PDOStatement::fetchObject(?string $class = "stdClass", array $constructorArgs = []): object|false

Récupère la prochaine ligne et la retourne en tant qu'objet. Cette fonction est une alternative à PDOStatement::fetch() avec PDO::FETCH_CLASS ou le style PDO::FETCH_OBJ.

Lorsqu'un objet est récupéré, ses propriétés sont assignées à partir des valeurs de colonne respectives, et ensuite son constructeur est appelé.

Liste de paramètres

class

Nom de la classe créée.

constructorArgs

Éléments de ce tableau sont passés au constructeur.

Valeurs de retour

Retourne une instance de la classe demandée avec les propriétés de noms qui correspondent aux noms des colonnes ou false si une erreur survient.

Erreurs / Exceptions

Émet une erreur de niveau E_WARNING si l'attribut PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE est défini à PDO::ERRMODE_WARNING.

Lève une exception PDOException si l'attribut PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE est défini à PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION.

Voir aussi

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User Contributed Notes 6 notes

up
108
rasmus at mindplay dot dk
11 years ago
Be warned of the rather unorthodox behavior of PDOStatement::fetchObject() which injects property-values BEFORE invoking the constructor - in other words, if your class initializes property-values to defaults in the constructor, you will be overwriting the values injected by fetchObject() !

A var_dump($this) in your __construct() method will reveal that property-values have been initialized prior to calling your constructor, so be careful.

For this reason, I strongly recommend hydrating your objects manually, after retrieving the data as an array, rather than trying to have PDO apply properties directly to your objects.

Clearly somebody thought they were being clever here - allowing you to access hydrated property-values from the constructor. Unfortunately, this is just not how OOP works - the constructor, by definition, is the first method called upon construction.

If you need to initialize your objects after they have been constructed and hydrated, I suggest your model types implement an interface with an init() method, and you data access layer invoke this method (if implemented) after hydrating.
up
25
Val Bancer
4 years ago
If you want the constructor to be invoked before `fetchObject` sets the properties then `PDOStatement::fetch` method with `PDO::FETCH_PROPS_LATE` argument should be used.
up
15
beinghavingbreackfast at gmail dot com
9 years ago
It should be mentioned that this method can set even non-public properties. It may sound strange but it can actually be very useful when creating an object based on mysql result.
Consider a User class:

<?php
class User {
// Private properties
private $id, $name;

private function
__construct () {}

public static function
load_by_id ($id) {
$stmt = $pdo->prepare('SELECT id, name FROM users WHERE id=?');
$stmt->execute([$id]);
return
$stmt->fetchObject(__CLASS__);
}
/* same method can be written with the "name" column/property */
}

$user = User::load_by_id(1);
var_dump($user);
?>

fetchObject() doesn't care about properties being public or not. It just passes the result to the object. Output is like:

object(User)#3 (2) {
["id":"User":private]=>
string(1) "1"
["name":"User":private]=>
string(10) "John Smith"
}
up
9
sebastian dot rapetti at alice dot it
7 years ago
PDOStatement::fetchObject() injects values as string, I needed a conversion type.

I did it including settype() function in class constructor

Below method that find an user by id and return user object instance:

<?php
class UserMapper extends MapperAbstract
{
//other code
public function findById(int $userId)
{
$pdos = $this->dBase->prepare('SELECT user_id AS objectId, name, description, password, active, created,
last_update AS lastUpdate FROM user WHERE user_id = :id'
);

$pdos->bindParam(':id', $userId, \PDO::PARAM_INT);
$pdos->execute();

return
$pdos->fetchObject('\DomainObjects\User', array($this->password));
}
//other code
}
?>

User class with type handling:

<?php
class User extends DomainObjectAbstract
{
//other code
public function __construct(Password $password)
{
$this->passwordUtility = $password;

settype($this->objectId, 'integer');
settype($this->active, 'integer');
}
//other code
}
?>

var_dump() of returned User instance:

<?php
object
(DomainObjects\User)[18]
public
'name' => string 'root' (length=4)
public
'description' => string 'System User' (length=11)
public
'password' => string '$2y$11$4IAn6SRaB0osPz8afZC5D.CmTrBGxnb5FQEygPjDirK9SWE/u8YuO' (length=60)
public
'active' => int 1
public 'created' => string '2015-02-14 10:39:00' (length=19)
public
'lastUpdate' => string '2016-08-30 18:46:56' (length=19)
private
'passwordUtility' =>
object(Auth\Password)[13]
protected
'options' =>
array (
size=1)
'cost' => int 11
protected 'objectId' => int 1
?>

'objectId' and 'active' are now of the type required
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3
zlk1214 at gmail dot com
8 years ago
You can access MySQL tables in an objective way. Suppose you have a table named Users that has fields: UserID, UserName, UserPassword, UserBirthday, you can create a PHP class extending DataObject that is associated with this table:
<?php
class User extends DataObject {
// name: Table Name, key: Primary Key (can be an array), auto: AUTO_INCREMENT field
protected static $_table = array('name' => 'Users', 'key' => 'UserID', 'auto' => 'UserID');
// relationships between PHP properties and MySQL field names
protected static $_propertyList = array('id' => 'UserID', 'name' => 'UserName', 'password' => 'UserPassword', 'birthday' => 'UserBirthday');

// A method that fetches all users as an array
public static function GetAll() {
global
$dbh;
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM Users';
$stmt = $dbh->query($sql);
$users = array();
while (
$user = $stmt->fetchObject(__CLASS__)) {
$users[] = $user;
}
return
$users;
}
// Methods that fetch a specific user
public static function GetUserByName($name) {}
public static function
GetUserByID($name) {}

// Methods for the current user object
public function checkPassword($password) {return $this->password == $password;}
public function
showLink() {return "<a href=\"user.php?i={$this->id}\">{$this->name}</a>";}
}

// Then, you can create an instance of this class to insert a row in your table
$user = new User();
$user->name = 'oct1158';
$user->password = '789012';
$user->useFunction('birthday', 'NOW()');
echo
'Field birthday uses MySQL Function: ', $user->birthday, '<br>';
if (
$user->insert()) {
echo
'New User ID: ', $user->id, '<br>';

// Update the row
$user->password = '112233';
$user->update();
} else {
echo
'INSERT Failed<br>';
}
// Get a specific user by a query
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM Users WHERE UserName = ?';
$stmt = $dbh->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute(array('admin'));
$admin_user = $stmt->fetchObject('User');
echo
'Admin ID is ', $admin_user->id, '.<br>';
echo
'Admin Birthday is ', $admin_user->birthday, '.<br>';

// Get all users by a static method of that class
$users = User::GetAll();
echo
'<br>';
echo
$users[0]->name, ', ', $users[0]->birthday, '<br>';
echo
$users[1]->name, ', ', $users[1]->birthday, '<br>';
echo
$users[2]->name, ', ', $users[2]->birthday, '<br>';
echo
'<br>';

// Create an empty user and then delete it immediately
$user = new User();
$user->insert();
$user->delete();
?>
The DataObject class example:
<?php
class DataObject {
private
$changedFields = array(); // list of updated fields
private $data = array(); // original row from PDOStatement
private $funcFields = array(); // fields that use MySQL functions
// The properties above are private in this class, so even if in your subclass you define some properties named the same, or you associate a property of the same name with a field in your table, they will never influence these properties.
function __get($property) {
if (isset(
$this::$_propertyList[$property])) {
return
$this->data[$this::$_propertyList[$property]]; // access fields by PHP properties
} else {
return
$this->$property; // throw the default PHP error
}
}
function
__set($property, $value) {
if (isset(
$this::$_propertyList[$property])) {
$field = $this::$_propertyList[$property];
$this->data[$field] = $value; // update $data

// take down changed fields
if (!in_array($field, $this->changedFields)) {
array_push($this->changedFields, $field);
}
$index = array_search($field, $this->funcFields);
if (
$index !== false) {
unset(
$this->funcFields[$index]);
$this->funcFields = array_values($this->funcFields);
}
} else {
// For fetchObject
$this->data[$property] = $value; // redirect to Array $data
}
}
private function
checkPrimaryKey() {}
private function
clear() {}
public function
delete() {}
public function
insert() {}
public function
update() {}
public function
useFunction($property, $function) {}
}
?>
up
2
dave at davidhbrown dot us
9 years ago
If using a namespaced class, you must provide the fully qualified class name; fetchObject does not seem to know about any "use" statements.

This results in a PHP Fatal error: Class 'MyClass' not found...:
<?php
use MyNamespace\MyClass;
// ...
$o = $statement->fetchObject('MyClass'));
?>
This works:
<?php
use MyNamespace\MyClass; //still needed for my code
// ...
$o = $statement->fetchObject('MyNamespace\\MyClass'));
?>
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