Hydrahon is a standalone database / SQL query builder written in PHP. It was built to enhance existing frameworks, libraries and applications that handle the database connection on their own. It does not come with a PDO or mysqli wrapper. The naming is heavily inspired by Eloquent and the Kohana Framework Database component.
What does that mean "Standalone query builder"?
Hydrahon only generates a query string and an array of parameters. On its own, it is not able to execute a query.
- The Hydrahon MySQL query builder is stable and used in production.
- The Hydrahon AQL (Arango Query Language) query builder is currently in development.
- A builder for Elasticsearch is on my mind but not in development.
Hydrahon follows PSR-4
autoloading and can be installed using composer:
$ composer require clancats/hydrahon
The full documentation can be found on clancats.io
Hydrahon is designed to be a pretty generic query builder. So for this quick start, we stick with SQL.
Again this library is not built as a full database abstraction or ORM, it is only and will always be only a query builder. This means we need to implement the database connection and fetching by ourselves.
In this example, we are going to use PDO
$connection = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=my_database', 'username', 'password');
// create a new mysql query builder
$h = new \ClanCats\Hydrahon\Builder('mysql', function($query, $queryString, $queryParameters) use($connection)
{
$statement = $connection->prepare($queryString);
$statement->execute($queryParameters);
// when the query is fetchable return all results and let hydrahon do the rest
if ($query instanceof \ClanCats\Hydrahon\Query\Sql\FetchableInterface)
{
return $statement->fetchAll(\PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
}
});
And we are ready and set. The variable $h
contains now a MySQL query builder.
To continue with our examples, we need to create a simple MySQL table.
CREATE TABLE `people` (
`id` int(11) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`name` varchar(255) DEFAULT '',
`age` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
Currently, we do not have any data, to fix this let's go and insert some.
// In our example we are going to execute multiple operations on the same table,
// so instead of loading the table over and over again, we store it in a variable.
$people = $h->table('people');
$people->insert(
[
['name' => 'Ray', 'age' => 25],
['name' => 'John', 'age' => 30],
['name' => 'Ali', 'age' => 22],
])->execute();
Will execute the following query:
insert into `people` (`age`, `name`) values (?, ?), (?, ?), (?, ?)
As you can see Hydrahon automatically escapes the parameters.
However, because we are humans that get confused when there are hundreds of thousands of questions marks, I will continue to always display the runnable query:
insert into `people` (`age`, `name`) values (25, Ray), (30, John), (22, Ali)
Ah snap, time runs so fast, "Ray" is actually already 26.
$people->update()
->set('age', 26)
->where('name', 'Ray')
->execute();
Generating:
update `people` set `age` = 26 where `name` = 'Ray'
Currently, you might think: "Well isn't it much simpler to just write the SQL query? I mean the PHP code is even longer...".
You have to understand that these are some very very basic examples the Hydrahon query builder starts to shine when things get more complex. However, a "Quick Start" is just the wrong place for complicated stuff, so throw an eye on the full documentation.
Dammit John, I hate you...
$people->delete()
->where('name', 'John')
->execute();
Generating:
delete from `people` where `name` = 'John'
And finally, fetch the data.
$people->select()->get();
Generating:
select * from `people`
Result:
[
{
"id": "1",
"name": "Ray",
"age": "26"
},
{
"id": "3",
"name": "Ali",
"age": "22"
}
]
For the next few examples, I just assume a larger dataset so that the queries make sense.
Chaining where conditions:
// select * from `people` where `name` like 'J%' and `age` > 21
$people->select()
->where('name', 'like', 'J%')
->where('age', '>', 21)
->get();
By default all where conditions are defined with the and
operator.
Different where operators:
// select * from `people` where `name` like 'J%' or `name` like 'I%'
$people->select()
->where('name', 'like', 'J%')
->orWhere('name', 'like', 'I%')
->get();
Allowing you to group conditions:
// select * from `people` where ( `age` > 21 and `age` < 99 ) or `group` = admin
$people->select()
->where(function($q)
{
$q->where('age', '>', 21);
$q->where('age', '<', 99);
})
->orWhere('group', 'admin')
->get();
Joining tables:
// select
// `people`.`name`, `groups`.`name` as `group_name`
// from `people`
// left join `groups` on `groups`.`id` = `people`.`group_id`
$people->select('people.name, groups.name as group_name')
->join('groups', 'groups.id', '=', 'people.group_id')
->get();
Grouping data:
// select * from `people` group by `age`
$people->select()->groupBy('age')->get();
Ordering data:
// select * from `people` order by `age` desc
$people->select()->orderBy('age', 'desc')->get();
// select * from `people` order by `age` desc, `name` asc
$people->select()->orderBy(['age' => 'desc', 'name' => 'asc'])->get();
Limit and offset:
// select * from `people` limit 0, 10
$people->select()->limit(10)->get();
// select * from `people` limit 100, 10
$people->select()->limit(100, 10)->get();
// select * from `people` limit 100, 10
$people->select()->limit(10)->offset(100)->get();
// select * from `people` limit 150, 30
$people->select()->page(5, 30)->get();
Small reminder this is the quick start, check out the full docs.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.