FluentPDO is a PHP SQL query builder using PDO. It's a quick and light library featuring a smart join builder, which automatically creates table joins for you.
- Easy interface for creating robust queries
- Supports any database compatible with PDO
- Ability to build complex SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE & DELETE queries with little code
- Type hinting for magic methods with code completion in smart IDEs
The stable release of FluentPDO and actively maintained. Officially supports PHP 7.3 to PHP 8.0, but it can work with previous versions of PHP 7.
The legacy release of FluentPDO. It is no longer supported and will not be maintained or updated. This version works with PHP 5.4 to 7.1.
This version is a full rewrite of Fluent from the ground up. Its main advantage is significantly less memory usage and much greater performance in query building. It also places a few additional restrictions to make queries easier to read and maintain. Documentation has also been a very common request, and version 3 is being fully documented alongside development. Details and metrics will be posted once available.
Sitepoint - Getting Started with FluentPDO
The preferred way to install FluentPDO is via composer.
Add the following line in your composer.json
file:
"require": {
...
"envms/fluentpdo": "^2.2.0"
}
update your dependencies with composer update
, and you're done!
If you prefer not to use composer, download the latest release, create the directory Envms/FluentPDO
in your library directory, and drop this repository into it. Finally, add:
require '[lib-dir]/Envms/FluentPDO/src/Query.php';
to the top of your application. Note: You will need an autoloader to use FluentPDO without changing its source code.
Create a new PDO instance, and pass the instance to FluentPDO:
$pdo = new PDO('mysql:dbname=fluentdb', 'user', 'password');
$fluent = new \Envms\FluentPDO\Query($pdo);
Then, creating queries is quick and easy:
$query = $fluent->from('comment')
->where('article.published_at > ?', $date)
->orderBy('published_at DESC')
->limit(5);
which would build the query below:
SELECT comment.*
FROM comment
LEFT JOIN article ON article.id = comment.article_id
WHERE article.published_at > ?
ORDER BY article.published_at DESC
LIMIT 5
To get data from the select, all we do is loop through the returned array:
foreach ($query as $row) {
echo "$row['title']\n";
}
Let's start with a traditional join, below:
$query = $fluent->from('article')
->leftJoin('user ON user.id = article.user_id')
->select('user.name');
That's pretty verbose, and not very smart. If your tables use proper primary and foreign key names, you can shorten the above to:
$query = $fluent->from('article')
->leftJoin('user')
->select('user.name');
That's better, but not ideal. However, it would be even easier to not write any joins:
$query = $fluent->from('article')
->select('user.name');
Awesome, right? FluentPDO is able to build the join for you, by you prepending the foreign table name to the requested column.
All three snippets above will create the exact same query:
SELECT article.*, user.name
FROM article
LEFT JOIN user ON user.id = article.user_id
Finally, it's always a good idea to free resources as soon as they are done with their duties:
$fluent->close();
$query = $fluent->from('article')->where('id', 1)->fetch();
$query = $fluent->from('user', 1)->fetch(); // shorter version if selecting one row by primary key
$values = array('title' => 'article 1', 'content' => 'content 1');
$query = $fluent->insertInto('article')->values($values)->execute();
$query = $fluent->insertInto('article', $values)->execute(); // shorter version
$set = array('published_at' => new FluentLiteral('NOW()'));
$query = $fluent->update('article')->set($set)->where('id', 1)->execute();
$query = $fluent->update('article', $set, 1)->execute(); // shorter version if updating one row by primary key
$query = $fluent->deleteFrom('article')->where('id', 1)->execute();
$query = $fluent->deleteFrom('article', 1)->execute(); // shorter version if deleting one row by primary key
Note: INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE queries will only run after you call ->execute()
Free for commercial and non-commercial use under the Apache 2.0 or GPL 2.0 licenses.