mirror of
https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-framework
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921 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
Executable File
921 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
Executable File
# Datamodel
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SilverStripe uses an [object-relational model](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object-relational_model)
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that assumes the following connections:
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* Each database-table maps to a PHP class
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* Each database-row maps to a PHP object
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* Each database-column maps to a property on a PHP object
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All data tables in SilverStripe are defined as subclasses of `[api:DataObject]`.
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Inheritance is supported in the data model: separate tables will be linked
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together, the data spread across these tables. The mapping and saving/loading
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logic is handled by SilverStripe, you don't need to worry about writing SQL most
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of the time.
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Most of the ORM customizations are possible through [PHP5 Object
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Overloading](http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/php/2005/06/16/overloading.html)
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handled in the `[api:Object]`-class.
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See [database-structure](/reference/database-structure) for in-depth information
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on the database-schema and the ["sql queries" topic](/reference/sqlquery) in
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case you need to drop down to the bare metal.
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## Generating the Database Schema
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The SilverStripe database-schema is generated automatically by visiting the URL.
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`http://<mysite>/dev/build`
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<div class="notice" markdown='1'>
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Note: You need to be logged in as an administrator to perform this command,
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unless your site is in "[dev mode](/topics/debugging)", or the command is run
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through CLI.
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</div>
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## Querying Data
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Every query to data starts with a `DataList::create(<class>)` or `<class>::get()`
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call. For example, this query would return all of the `Member` objects:
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:::php
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$members = Member::get();
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The ORM uses a "fluent" syntax, where you specify a query by chaining together
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different methods. Two common methods are `filter()` and `sort()`:
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam'
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))->sort('Surname');
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Those of you who know a bit about SQL might be thinking "it looks like you're
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querying all members, and then filtering to those with a first name of 'Sam'.
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Isn't this very slow?" Is isn't, because the ORM doesn't actually execute the
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SQL query until you iterate on the result with a `foreach()` or `<% loop %>`.
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The ORM is smart enough to generate a single efficient query at the last moment
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in time without needing to post process the result set in PHP. In MySQL the
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query generated by the ORM may look something like this for the previous query.
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:::
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SELECT * FROM Member WHERE FirstName = 'Sam' ORDER BY Surname
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An example of the query process in action:
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:::php
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// The SQL query isn't executed here...
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$members = Member::get();
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// ...or here
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$members = $members->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam'));
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// ...or even here
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$members = $members->sort('Surname');
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// *This* is where the query is executed
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foreach($members as $member) {
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echo "<p>$member->FirstName $member->Surname</p>";
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}
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This also means that getting the count of a list of objects will be done with a
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single, efficient query.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam'
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))->sort('Surname');
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// This will create an single SELECT COUNT query similar to -
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// SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Members WHERE FirstName = 'Sam'
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echo $members->Count();
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### Returning a single DataObject
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There are a couple of ways of getting a single DataObject from the ORM. If you
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know the ID number of the object, you can use `byID($id)`:
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:::php
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$member = Member::get()->byID(5);
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If you have constructed a query that you know should return a single record, you
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can call `First()`:
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:::php
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$member = Member::get()->filter(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam', 'Surname' => 'Minnee'
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))->First();
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### Sort
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Quite often you would like to sort a list. Doing this on a list could be done in
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a few ways.
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If would like to sort the list by `FirstName` in a ascending way (from A to Z).
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->sort('FirstName', 'ASC'); // ASC or DESC
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$members = Member::get()->sort('FirstName'); // Ascending is implied
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To reverse the sort
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->sort('FirstName', 'DESC');
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// or..
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$members = Member::get()->sort('FirstName', 'ASC')->reverse();
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However you might have several entries with the same `FirstName` and would like
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to sort them by `FirstName` and `LastName`
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:::php
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$member = Member::get()->sort(array(
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'FirstName' => 'ASC',
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'LastName'=>'ASC'
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));
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You can also sort randomly
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:::php
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$member = Member::get()->sort('RAND()')
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### Filter
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As you might expect, the `filter()` method filters the list of objects that gets
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returned. The previous example included this filter, which returns all Members
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with a first name of "Sam".
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam'));
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In SilverStripe 2, we would have passed `"\"FirstName\" = 'Sam'` to make this
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query. Now, we pass an array, `array('FirstName' => 'Sam')`, to minimize the
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risk of SQL injection bugs. The format of this array follows a few rules:
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* Each element of the array specifies a filter. You can specify as many
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filters as you like, and they **all** must be true.
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* The key in the filter corresponds to the field that you want to filter by.
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* The value in the filter corresponds to the value that you want to filter to.
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So, this would return only those members called "Sam Minnée".
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam',
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'Surname' => 'Minnée',
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));
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There is also a short hand way of getting Members with the FirstName of Sam.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter('FirstName', 'Sam');
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Or if you want to find both Sam and Sig.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(
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'FirstName', array('Sam', 'Sig')
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);
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Then there is the most complex task when you want to find Sam and Sig that has
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either Age 17 or 74.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(array(
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'FirstName' => array('Sam', 'Sig'),
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'Age' => array(17, 74)
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));
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// SQL: WHERE ("FirstName" IN ('Sam', 'Sig) AND "Age" IN ('17', '74))
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In case you want to match multiple criteria non-exclusively (with an "OR"
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disjunctive),use the `filterAny()` method instead:
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filterAny(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam',
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'Age' => 17,
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));
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// SQL: WHERE ("FirstName" = 'Sam' OR "Age" = '17')
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You can also combine both conjunctive ("AND") and disjunctive ("OR") statements.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()
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->filter(array(
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'LastName' => 'Minnée'
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))
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->filterAny(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam',
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'Age' => 17,
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));
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// WHERE ("LastName" = 'Minnée' AND ("FirstName" = 'Sam' OR "Age" = '17'))
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### Exclude
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The `exclude()` method is the opposite to the filter in that it removes entries
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from a list.
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If we would like to remove all members from the list with the FirstName of Sam.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->exclude('FirstName', 'Sam');
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Remove both Sam and Sig is as easy as.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->exclude('FirstName', array('Sam','Sig'));
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As you can see it follows the same pattern as filter, so for removing only Sam
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Minnée from the list:
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->exclude(array(
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'FirstName' => 'Sam',
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'Surname' => 'Minnée',
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));
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And removing Sig and Sam with that are either age 17 or 74.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->exclude(array(
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'FirstName' => array('Sam', 'Sig'),
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'Age' => array(17, 43)
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));
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This would be equivalent to a SQL query of
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:::
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... WHERE ("FirstName" NOT IN ('Sam','Sig) OR "Age" NOT IN ('17', '74));
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### Search Filter Modifiers
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The where clauses showcased in the previous two sections (filter and exclude)
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specify exact matches by default. However, there are a number of suffixes that
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you can put on field names to change this behavior such as `":StartsWith"`,
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`":EndsWith"`, `":PartialMatch"`, `":GreaterThan"`, `":LessThan"`,
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`":Negation"`.
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Each of these suffixes is represented in the ORM as a subclass of
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`[api:SearchFilter]`. Developers can define their own SearchFilters if needing
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to extend the ORM filter and exclude behaviors.
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These suffixes can also take modifiers themselves. The modifiers currently
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supported are `":not"`, `":nocase"` and `":case"`. These negate the filter,
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make it case-insensitive and make it case-sensitive respectively. The default
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comparison uses the database's default. For MySQL and MSSQL, this is
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case-insensitive. For PostgreSQL, this is case-sensitive.
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The following is a query which will return everyone whose first name doesn't
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start with S, who has logged in since 1/1/2011.
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->filter(array(
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'FirstName:StartsWith:Not' => 'S'
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'Birthday:GreaterThan' => '2011-01-01'
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));
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### Subtract
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You can subtract entries from a DataList by passing in another DataList to
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`subtract()`
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:::php
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$allSams = Member::get()->filter('FirstName', 'Sam');
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$allMembers = Member::get();
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$noSams = $allMembers->subtract($allSams);
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Though for the above example it would probably be easier to use `filter()` and
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`exclude()`. A better use case could be when you want to find all the members
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that does not exist in a Group.
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:::php
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// ... Finding all members that does not belong to $group.
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$otherMembers = Member::get()->subtract($group->Members());
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### Limit
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You can limit the amount of records returned in a DataList by using the
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`limit()` method.
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:::php
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// Returning the first 5 members, sorted alphabetically by Surname
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$members = Member::get()->sort('Surname')->limit(5);
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`limit()` accepts two arguments, the first being the amount of results you want
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returned, with an optional second parameter to specify the offset, which allows
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you to tell the system where to start getting the results from. The offset, if
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not provided as an argument, will default to 0.
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:::php
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// Return 10 members with an offset of 4 (starting from the 5th result).
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// Note that the argument order is different from a MySQL LIMIT clause
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$members = Member::get()->sort('Surname')->limit(10, 4);
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### Raw SQL options for advanced users
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Occasionally, the system described above won't let you do exactly what you need
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to do. In these situations, we have methods that manipulate the SQL query at a
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lower level. When using these, please ensure that all table & field names are
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escaped with double quotes, otherwise some DB back-ends (e.g. PostgreSQL) won't
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work.
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Under the hood, query generation is handled by the `[api:DataQuery]` class. This
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class does provide more direct access to certain SQL features that `DataList`
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abstracts away from you.
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In general, we advise against using these methods unless it's absolutely
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necessary. If the ORM doesn't do quite what you need it to, you may also
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consider extending the ORM with new data types or filter modifiers (that
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documentation still needs to be written)
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#### Where clauses
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You can specify a WHERE clause fragment (that will be combined with other
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filters using AND) with the `where()` method:
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:::php
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$members = Member::get()->where("\"FirstName\" = 'Sam'")
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#### Joining
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You can specify a join with the innerJoin and leftJoin methods. Both of these
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methods have the same arguments:
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* The name of the table to join to
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* The filter clause for the join
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* An optional alias
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For example:
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:::php
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// Without an alias
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$members = Member::get()
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->leftJoin("Group_Members", "\"Group_Members\".\"MemberID\" = \"Member\".\"ID\"");
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$members = Member::get()
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->innerJoin("Group_Members", "\"Rel\".\"MemberID\" = \"Member\".\"ID\"", "Rel");
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Passing a *$join* statement to DataObject::get will filter results further by
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the JOINs performed against the foreign table. **It will NOT return the
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additionally joined data.** The returned *$records* will always be a
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`[api:DataObject]`.
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## Properties
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### Definition
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Data is defined in the static variable $db on each class, in the format:
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`<property-name>` => "data-type"
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:::php
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class Player extends DataObject {
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private static $db = array(
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"FirstName" => "Varchar",
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"Surname" => "Varchar",
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"Description" => "Text",
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"Status" => "Enum('Active, Injured, Retired')",
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"Birthday" => "Date"
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);
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}
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See [data-types](data-types) for all available types.
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### Overloading
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"Getters" and "Setters" are functions that help us save fields to our data
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objects. By default, the methods getField() and setField() are used to set data
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object fields. They save to the protected array, $obj->record. We can overload
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the default behavior by making a function called "get`<fieldname>`" or
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"set`<fieldname>`".
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:::php
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class Player extends DataObject {
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private static $db = array(
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"Status" => "Enum('Active, Injured, Retired')"
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);
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// access through $myPlayer->Status
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public function getStatus() {
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// check if the Player is actually... born already!
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return (!$this->obj("Birthday")->InPast()) ? "Unborn" : $this->Status;
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}
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### Customizing
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We can create new "virtual properties" which are not actually listed in
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`private static $db` or stored in the database-row.
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Here we combined a Player's first name and surname, accessible through
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$myPlayer->Title.
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:::php
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class Player extends DataObject {
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public function getTitle() {
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return "{$this->FirstName} {$this->Surname}";
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}
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// access through $myPlayer->Title = "John Doe";
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// just saves data on the object, please use $myPlayer->write() to save
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// the database-row
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public function setTitle($title) {
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list($firstName, $surName) = explode(' ', $title);
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$this->FirstName = $firstName;
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$this->Surname = $surName;
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}
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}
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<div class="warning" markdown='1'>
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**CAUTION:** It is common practice to make sure that pairs of custom
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getters/setter deal with the same data, in a consistent format.
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</div>
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<div class="warning" markdown='1'>
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**CAUTION:** Custom setters can be hard to debug: Please double check if you
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could transform your data in more straight-forward logic embedded to your custom
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controller or form-saving.
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</div>
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### Default Values
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Define the default values for all the $db fields. This example sets the
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"Status"-column on Player to "Active" whenever a new object is created.
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:::php
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class Player extends DataObject {
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private static $defaults = array(
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"Status" => 'Active',
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);
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}
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<div class="notice" markdown='1'>
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Note: Alternatively you can set defaults directly in the database-schema (rather
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than the object-model). See [data-types](data-types) for details.
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</div>
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### Casting
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Properties defined in *static $db* are automatically casted to their
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[data-types](data-types) when used in templates.
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You can also cast the return-values of your custom functions (e.g. your "virtual
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properties"). Calling those functions directly will still return whatever type
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your PHP code generates, but using the *obj()*-method or accessing through a
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template will cast the value according to the $casting-definition.
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:::php
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class Player extends DataObject {
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private static $casting = array(
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"MembershipFee" => 'Currency',
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);
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// $myPlayer->MembershipFee() returns a float (e.g. 123.45)
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// $myPlayer->obj('MembershipFee') returns a object of type Currency
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// In a template: <% loop $MyPlayer %>MembershipFee.Nice<% end_loop %>
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// returns a casted string (e.g. "$123.45")
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public function getMembershipFee() {
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return $this->Team()->BaseFee * $this->MembershipYears;
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}
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}
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## Relations
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Relations are built through static array definitions on a class, in the format
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`<relationship-name> => <classname>`.
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### has_one
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A 1-to-1 relation creates a database-column called "`<relationship-name>`ID", in
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the example below this would be "TeamID" on the "Player"-table.
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:::php
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// access with $myPlayer->Team()
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class Player extends DataObject {
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private static $has_one = array(
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"Team" => "Team",
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);
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}
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SilverStripe's `[api:SiteTree]` base-class for content-pages uses a 1-to-1
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relationship to link to its parent element in the tree:
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:::php
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// access with $mySiteTree->Parent()
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class SiteTree extends DataObject {
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private static $has_one = array(
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"Parent" => "SiteTree",
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);
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}
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### has_many
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Defines 1-to-many joins. A database-column named ""`<relationship-name>`ID""
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will to be created in the child-class.
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<div class="warning" markdown='1'>
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**CAUTION:** Please specify a $has_one-relationship on the related child-class
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as well, in order to have the necessary accessors available on both ends.
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</div>
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:::php
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// access with $myTeam->Players() or $player->Team()
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class Team extends DataObject {
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private static $has_many = array(
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"Players" => "Player",
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);
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}
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|
class Player extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $has_one = array(
|
|
"Team" => "Team",
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
To specify multiple $has_manys to the same object you can use dot notation to
|
|
distinguish them like below
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
class Person extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $has_many = array(
|
|
"Managing" => "Company.Manager",
|
|
"Cleaning" => "Company.Cleaner",
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
class Company extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $has_one = array(
|
|
"Manager" => "Person",
|
|
"Cleaner" => "Person"
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
Multiple $has_one relationships are okay if they aren't linking to the same
|
|
object type.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
/**
|
|
* THIS IS BAD
|
|
*/
|
|
class Team extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $has_many = array(
|
|
"Players" => "Player",
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
class Player extends DataObject {
|
|
private static $has_one = array(
|
|
"Team" => "Team",
|
|
"AnotherTeam" => "Team",
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
### belongs_to
|
|
|
|
Defines a 1-to-1 relationship with another object, which declares the other end
|
|
of the relationship with a corresponding $has_one. A single database column named
|
|
`<relationship-name>ID` will be created in the object with the $has_one, but
|
|
the $belongs_to by itself will not create a database field. This field will hold
|
|
the ID of the object declaring the $belongs_to.
|
|
|
|
Similarly with $has_many, dot notation can be used to explicitly specify the $has_one
|
|
which refers to this relation. This is not mandatory unless the relationship would
|
|
be otherwise ambiguous.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
|
|
class Torso extends DataObject {
|
|
// HeadID will be generated on the Torso table
|
|
private static $has_one = array(
|
|
'Head' => 'Head'
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
class Head extends DataObject {
|
|
// No database field created. The '.Head' suffix could be omitted
|
|
private static $belongs_to = array(
|
|
'Torso' => 'Torso.Head'
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
### many_many
|
|
|
|
Defines many-to-many joins. A new table, (this-class)_(relationship-name), will
|
|
be created with a pair of ID fields.
|
|
|
|
<div class="warning" markdown='1'>
|
|
**CAUTION:** Please specify a $belongs_many_many-relationship on the related
|
|
class as well, in order to have the necessary accessors available on both ends.
|
|
</div>
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
// access with $myTeam->Categories() or $myCategory->Teams()
|
|
class Team extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $many_many = array(
|
|
"Categories" => "Category",
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
class Category extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $belongs_many_many = array(
|
|
"Teams" => "Team",
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Adding relations
|
|
|
|
Adding new items to a relations works the same, regardless if you're editing a
|
|
*has_many*- or a *many_many*. They are encapsulated by `[api:HasManyList]` and
|
|
`[api:ManyManyList]`, both of which provide very similar APIs, e.g. an `add()`
|
|
and `remove()` method.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
class Team extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
// see "many_many"-description for a sample definition of class "Category"
|
|
private static $many_many = array(
|
|
"Categories" => "Category",
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
public function addCategories(SS_List $cats) {
|
|
foreach($cats as $cat) $this->Categories()->add($cat);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Custom Relations
|
|
|
|
You can use the flexible datamodel to get a filtered result-list without writing
|
|
any SQL. For example, this snippet gets you the "Players"-relation on a team,
|
|
but only containing active players.
|
|
|
|
See `[api:DataObject::$has_many]` for more info on the described relations.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
class Team extends DataObject {
|
|
private static $has_many = array(
|
|
"Players" => "Player"
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
// can be accessed by $myTeam->ActivePlayers()
|
|
public function ActivePlayers() {
|
|
return $this->Players()->filter('Status', 'Active');
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
Note: Adding new records to a filtered `RelationList` like in the example above
|
|
doesn't automatically set the filtered criteria on the added record.
|
|
|
|
### Relations on Unsaved Objects
|
|
|
|
You can also set *has_many* and *many_many* relations before the `DataObject` is
|
|
saved. This behaviour uses the `[api:UnsavedRelationList]` and converts it into
|
|
the correct `RelationList` when saving the `DataObject` for the first time.
|
|
|
|
This unsaved lists will also recursively save any unsaved objects that they
|
|
contain.
|
|
|
|
As these lists are not backed by the database, most of the filtering methods on
|
|
`DataList` cannot be used on a list of this type. As such, an
|
|
`UnsavedRelationList` should only be used for setting a relation before saving
|
|
an object, not for displaying the objects contained in the relation.
|
|
|
|
## Validation and Constraints
|
|
|
|
Traditionally, validation in SilverStripe has been mostly handled on the
|
|
controller through [form validation](/topics/form-validation).
|
|
|
|
While this is a useful approach, it can lead to data inconsistencies if the
|
|
record is modified outside of the controller and form context.
|
|
|
|
Most validation constraints are actually data constraints which belong on the
|
|
model. SilverStripe provides the `[api:DataObject->validate()]` method for this
|
|
purpose.
|
|
|
|
By default, there is no validation - objects are always valid!
|
|
However, you can overload this method in your
|
|
DataObject sub-classes to specify custom validation,
|
|
or use the hook through `[api:DataExtension]`.
|
|
|
|
Invalid objects won't be able to be written - a [api:ValidationException]` will
|
|
be thrown and no write will occur.
|
|
|
|
It is expected that you call validate() in your own application to test that an
|
|
object is valid before attempting a write, and respond appropriately if it isn't.
|
|
|
|
The return value of `validate()` is a `[api:ValidationResult]` object.
|
|
You can append your own errors in there.
|
|
|
|
Example: Validate postcodes based on the selected country
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
class MyObject extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $db = array(
|
|
'Country' => 'Varchar',
|
|
'Postcode' => 'Varchar'
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
public function validate() {
|
|
$result = parent::validate();
|
|
if($this->Country == 'DE' && $this->Postcode && strlen($this->Postcode) != 5) {
|
|
$result->error('Need five digits for German postcodes');
|
|
}
|
|
return $result;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
## Maps
|
|
|
|
A map is an array where the array indexes contain data as well as the values.
|
|
You can build a map from any DataList like this:
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$members = Member::get()->map('ID', 'FirstName');
|
|
|
|
This will return a map where the keys are Member IDs, and the values are the
|
|
corresponding FirstName values. Like everything else in the ORM, these maps are
|
|
lazy loaded, so the following code will only query a single record from the
|
|
database:
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$members = Member::get()->map('ID', 'FirstName');
|
|
echo $member[5];
|
|
|
|
This functionality is provided by the `SS_Map` class, which can be used to build
|
|
a map around any `SS_List`.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$members = Member::get();
|
|
$map = new SS_Map($members, 'ID', 'FirstName');
|
|
|
|
Note: You can also retrieve a single property from all contained records
|
|
through `[api:SS_List->column()]`.
|
|
|
|
## Data Handling
|
|
|
|
When saving data through the object model, you don't have to manually escape
|
|
strings to create SQL-safe commands. You have to make sure though that certain
|
|
properties are not overwritten, e.g. *ID* or *ClassName*.
|
|
|
|
### Creation
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$myPlayer = new Player();
|
|
$myPlayer->Firstname = "John"; // sets property on object
|
|
$myPlayer->write(); // writes row to database
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Update
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$myPlayer = Player::get()->byID(99);
|
|
if($myPlayer) {
|
|
$myPlayer->Firstname = "John"; // sets property on object
|
|
$myPlayer->write(); // writes row to database
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Batch Update
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$myPlayer->update(
|
|
ArrayLib::filter_keys(
|
|
$_REQUEST,
|
|
array('Birthday', 'Firstname')
|
|
)
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alternatively you can use *castedUpdate()* to respect the
|
|
[data-types](/topics/data-types). This is preferred to manually casting data
|
|
before saving.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$myPlayer->castedUpdate(
|
|
ArrayLib::filter_keys(
|
|
$_REQUEST,
|
|
array('Birthday', 'Firstname')
|
|
)
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
|
|
### onBeforeWrite
|
|
|
|
You can customize saving-behaviour for each DataObject, e.g. for adding workflow
|
|
or data customization. The function is triggered when calling *write()* to save
|
|
the object to the database. This includes saving a page in the CMS or altering a
|
|
ModelAdmin record.
|
|
|
|
Example: Disallow creation of new players if the currently logged-in player is
|
|
not a team-manager.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
class Player extends DataObject {
|
|
|
|
private static $has_many = array(
|
|
"Teams"=>"Team"
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
public function onBeforeWrite() {
|
|
// check on first write action, aka "database row creation"
|
|
// (ID-property is not set)
|
|
if(!$this->ID) {
|
|
$currentPlayer = Member::currentUser();
|
|
if(!$currentPlayer->IsTeamManager()) {
|
|
user_error('Player-creation not allowed', E_USER_ERROR);
|
|
exit();
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// check on every write action
|
|
if(!$this->record['TeamID']) {
|
|
user_error('Cannot save player without a valid team', E_USER_ERROR);
|
|
exit();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// CAUTION: You are required to call the parent-function, otherwise
|
|
// SilverStripe will not execute the request.
|
|
parent::onBeforeWrite();
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
<div class="notice" markdown='1'>
|
|
Note: There are no separate methods for *onBeforeCreate* and *onBeforeUpdate*.
|
|
Please check for the existence of $this->ID to toggle these two modes, as shown
|
|
in the example above.
|
|
</div>
|
|
|
|
### onBeforeDelete
|
|
|
|
Triggered before executing *delete()* on an existing object.
|
|
|
|
Example: Checking for a specific [permission](/reference/permission) to delete
|
|
this type of object. It checks if a member is logged in who belongs to a group
|
|
containing the permission "PLAYER_DELETE".
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
class Player extends DataObject {
|
|
private static $has_many = array(
|
|
"Teams"=>"Team"
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
public function onBeforeDelete() {
|
|
if(!Permission::check('PLAYER_DELETE')) {
|
|
Security::permissionFailure($this);
|
|
exit();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
parent::onBeforeDelete();
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
### Saving data with forms
|
|
|
|
See [forms](/topics/forms).
|
|
|
|
### Saving data with custom SQL
|
|
|
|
See the ["sql queries" topic](/reference/sqlquery) for custom *INSERT*,
|
|
*UPDATE*, *DELETE* queries.
|
|
|
|
## Extending DataObjects
|
|
|
|
You can add properties and methods to existing `[api:DataObjects]`s like
|
|
`[api:Member]` (a core class) without hacking core code or subclassing. See
|
|
`[api:DataExtension]` for a general description, and `[api:Hierarchy]` for the
|
|
most popular examples.
|
|
|
|
## FAQ
|
|
|
|
### What's the difference between DataObject::get() and a relation-getter?
|
|
|
|
You can work with both in pretty much the same way, but relationship-getters
|
|
return a special type of collection:
|
|
|
|
A `[api:HasManyList]` or a `[api:ManyManyList]` with relation-specific
|
|
functionality.
|
|
|
|
:::php
|
|
$myTeams = $myPlayer->Team(); // returns HasManyList
|
|
$myTeam->add($myOtherPlayer);
|