| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269 | <?php/** * @link http://www.yiiframework.com/ * @copyright Copyright (c) 2008 Yii Software LLC * @license http://www.yiiframework.com/license/ */namespace yii\db;/** * The QueryInterface defines the minimum set of methods to be implemented by a database query. * * The default implementation of this interface is provided by [[QueryTrait]]. * * It has support for getting [[one]] instance or [[all]]. * Allows pagination via [[limit]] and [[offset]]. * Sorting is supported via [[orderBy]] and items can be limited to match some conditions using [[where]]. * * @author Qiang Xue <qiang.xue@gmail.com> * @author Carsten Brandt <mail@cebe.cc> * @since 2.0 */interface QueryInterface{    /**     * Executes the query and returns all results as an array.     * @param Connection $db the database connection used to execute the query.     * If this parameter is not given, the `db` application component will be used.     * @return array the query results. If the query results in nothing, an empty array will be returned.     */    public function all($db = null);    /**     * Executes the query and returns a single row of result.     * @param Connection $db the database connection used to execute the query.     * If this parameter is not given, the `db` application component will be used.     * @return array|bool the first row (in terms of an array) of the query result. False is returned if the query     * results in nothing.     */    public function one($db = null);    /**     * Returns the number of records.     * @param string $q the COUNT expression. Defaults to '*'.     * @param Connection $db the database connection used to execute the query.     * If this parameter is not given, the `db` application component will be used.     * @return int number of records.     */    public function count($q = '*', $db = null);    /**     * Returns a value indicating whether the query result contains any row of data.     * @param Connection $db the database connection used to execute the query.     * If this parameter is not given, the `db` application component will be used.     * @return bool whether the query result contains any row of data.     */    public function exists($db = null);    /**     * Sets the [[indexBy]] property.     * @param string|callable $column the name of the column by which the query results should be indexed by.     * This can also be a callable (e.g. anonymous function) that returns the index value based on the given     * row data. The signature of the callable should be:     *     * ```php     * function ($row)     * {     *     // return the index value corresponding to $row     * }     * ```     *     * @return $this the query object itself     */    public function indexBy($column);    /**     * Sets the WHERE part of the query.     *     * The `$condition` specified as an array can be in one of the following two formats:     *     * - hash format: `['column1' => value1, 'column2' => value2, ...]`     * - operator format: `[operator, operand1, operand2, ...]`     *     * A condition in hash format represents the following SQL expression in general:     * `column1=value1 AND column2=value2 AND ...`. In case when a value is an array,     * an `IN` expression will be generated. And if a value is `null`, `IS NULL` will be used     * in the generated expression. Below are some examples:     *     * - `['type' => 1, 'status' => 2]` generates `(type = 1) AND (status = 2)`.     * - `['id' => [1, 2, 3], 'status' => 2]` generates `(id IN (1, 2, 3)) AND (status = 2)`.     * - `['status' => null]` generates `status IS NULL`.     *     * A condition in operator format generates the SQL expression according to the specified operator, which     * can be one of the following:     *     * - **and**: the operands should be concatenated together using `AND`. For example,     *   `['and', 'id=1', 'id=2']` will generate `id=1 AND id=2`. If an operand is an array,     *   it will be converted into a string using the rules described here. For example,     *   `['and', 'type=1', ['or', 'id=1', 'id=2']]` will generate `type=1 AND (id=1 OR id=2)`.     *   The method will *not* do any quoting or escaping.     *     * - **or**: similar to the `and` operator except that the operands are concatenated using `OR`. For example,     *   `['or', ['type' => [7, 8, 9]], ['id' => [1, 2, 3]]]` will generate `(type IN (7, 8, 9) OR (id IN (1, 2, 3)))`.     *     * - **not**: this will take only one operand and build the negation of it by prefixing the query string with `NOT`.     *   For example `['not', ['attribute' => null]]` will result in the condition `NOT (attribute IS NULL)`.     *     * - **between**: operand 1 should be the column name, and operand 2 and 3 should be the     *   starting and ending values of the range that the column is in.     *   For example, `['between', 'id', 1, 10]` will generate `id BETWEEN 1 AND 10`.     *     * - **not between**: similar to `between` except the `BETWEEN` is replaced with `NOT BETWEEN`     *   in the generated condition.     *     * - **in**: operand 1 should be a column or DB expression, and operand 2 be an array representing     *   the range of the values that the column or DB expression should be in. For example,     *   `['in', 'id', [1, 2, 3]]` will generate `id IN (1, 2, 3)`.     *   The method will properly quote the column name and escape values in the range.     *     *   To create a composite `IN` condition you can use and array for the column name and value, where the values are indexed by the column name:     *   `['in', ['id', 'name'], [['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo'], ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar']] ]`.     *     *   You may also specify a sub-query that is used to get the values for the `IN`-condition:     *   `['in', 'user_id', (new Query())->select('id')->from('users')->where(['active' => 1])]`     *     * - **not in**: similar to the `in` operator except that `IN` is replaced with `NOT IN` in the generated condition.     *     * - **like**: operand 1 should be a column or DB expression, and operand 2 be a string or an array representing     *   the values that the column or DB expression should be like.     *   For example, `['like', 'name', 'tester']` will generate `name LIKE '%tester%'`.     *   When the value range is given as an array, multiple `LIKE` predicates will be generated and concatenated     *   using `AND`. For example, `['like', 'name', ['test', 'sample']]` will generate     *   `name LIKE '%test%' AND name LIKE '%sample%'`.     *   The method will properly quote the column name and escape special characters in the values.     *   Sometimes, you may want to add the percentage characters to the matching value by yourself, you may supply     *   a third operand `false` to do so. For example, `['like', 'name', '%tester', false]` will generate `name LIKE '%tester'`.     *     * - **or like**: similar to the `like` operator except that `OR` is used to concatenate the `LIKE`     *   predicates when operand 2 is an array.     *     * - **not like**: similar to the `like` operator except that `LIKE` is replaced with `NOT LIKE`     *   in the generated condition.     *     * - **or not like**: similar to the `not like` operator except that `OR` is used to concatenate     *   the `NOT LIKE` predicates.     *     * - **exists**: operand 1 is a query object that used to build an `EXISTS` condition. For example     *   `['exists', (new Query())->select('id')->from('users')->where(['active' => 1])]` will result in the following SQL expression:     *   `EXISTS (SELECT "id" FROM "users" WHERE "active"=1)`.     *     * - **not exists**: similar to the `exists` operator except that `EXISTS` is replaced with `NOT EXISTS` in the generated condition.     *     * - Additionally you can specify arbitrary operators as follows: A condition of `['>=', 'id', 10]` will result in the     *   following SQL expression: `id >= 10`.     *     * **Note that this method will override any existing WHERE condition. You might want to use [[andWhere()]] or [[orWhere()]] instead.**     *     * @param array $condition the conditions that should be put in the WHERE part.     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see andWhere()     * @see orWhere()     */    public function where($condition);    /**     * Adds an additional WHERE condition to the existing one.     * The new condition and the existing one will be joined using the 'AND' operator.     * @param array $condition the new WHERE condition. Please refer to [[where()]]     * on how to specify this parameter.     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see where()     * @see orWhere()     */    public function andWhere($condition);    /**     * Adds an additional WHERE condition to the existing one.     * The new condition and the existing one will be joined using the 'OR' operator.     * @param array $condition the new WHERE condition. Please refer to [[where()]]     * on how to specify this parameter.     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see where()     * @see andWhere()     */    public function orWhere($condition);    /**     * Sets the WHERE part of the query ignoring empty parameters.     *     * @param array $condition the conditions that should be put in the WHERE part. Please refer to [[where()]]     * on how to specify this parameter.     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see andFilterWhere()     * @see orFilterWhere()     */    public function filterWhere(array $condition);    /**     * Adds an additional WHERE condition to the existing one ignoring empty parameters.     * The new condition and the existing one will be joined using the 'AND' operator.     * @param array $condition the new WHERE condition. Please refer to [[where()]]     * on how to specify this parameter.     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see filterWhere()     * @see orFilterWhere()     */    public function andFilterWhere(array $condition);    /**     * Adds an additional WHERE condition to the existing one ignoring empty parameters.     * The new condition and the existing one will be joined using the 'OR' operator.     * @param array $condition the new WHERE condition. Please refer to [[where()]]     * on how to specify this parameter.     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see filterWhere()     * @see andFilterWhere()     */    public function orFilterWhere(array $condition);    /**     * Sets the ORDER BY part of the query.     * @param string|array $columns the columns (and the directions) to be ordered by.     * Columns can be specified in either a string (e.g. "id ASC, name DESC") or an array     * (e.g. `['id' => SORT_ASC, 'name' => SORT_DESC]`).     * The method will automatically quote the column names unless a column contains some parenthesis     * (which means the column contains a DB expression).     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see addOrderBy()     */    public function orderBy($columns);    /**     * Adds additional ORDER BY columns to the query.     * @param string|array $columns the columns (and the directions) to be ordered by.     * Columns can be specified in either a string (e.g. "id ASC, name DESC") or an array     * (e.g. `['id' => SORT_ASC, 'name' => SORT_DESC]`).     * The method will automatically quote the column names unless a column contains some parenthesis     * (which means the column contains a DB expression).     * @return $this the query object itself     * @see orderBy()     */    public function addOrderBy($columns);    /**     * Sets the LIMIT part of the query.     * @param int|null $limit the limit. Use null or negative value to disable limit.     * @return $this the query object itself     */    public function limit($limit);    /**     * Sets the OFFSET part of the query.     * @param int|null $offset the offset. Use null or negative value to disable offset.     * @return $this the query object itself     */    public function offset($offset);    /**     * Sets whether to emulate query execution, preventing any interaction with data storage.     * After this mode is enabled, methods, returning query results like [[one()]], [[all()]], [[exists()]]     * and so on, will return empty or false values.     * You should use this method in case your program logic indicates query should not return any results, like     * in case you set false where condition like `0=1`.     * @param bool $value whether to prevent query execution.     * @return $this the query object itself.     * @since 2.0.11     */    public function emulateExecution($value = true);}
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