Zend Framework 2 Db\Adapter\Adapter query resultset like ZF1

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情深已故 2021-02-08 15:36

Just need a hand understanding some simple database queries in ZF2. In ZF1 I have simple methods like this:

public function recordset()
{
// listing of all reco         


        
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  • 2021-02-08 16:08

    You can avoid the foreach loop by doing the following:

    $statement = $db->query($sql);
    
    /** @var $results Zend\Db\ResultSet\ResultSet */
    $results = $statement->execute();
    
    $data = $result->getResource()->fetchAll();
    // Now data is an array
    
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  • 2021-02-08 16:10

    From http://framework.zend.com/manual/2.0/en/modules/zend.db.result-set.html:

    Zend\Db\ResultSet is a sub-component of Zend\Db for abstracting the iteration of rowset producing queries.

    So you can do the following:

    $statement = $db -> query($sql);
    
    /** @var $results Zend\Db\ResultSet\ResultSet */
    $results = $statement -> execute();
    
    $returnArray = array();
    // iterate through the rows
    foreach ($results as $result) {
        $returnArray[] = $result;
    }
    

    Now you can send it to the view:

    return new ViewModel(array('results' => $returnArray));
    
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  • 2021-02-08 16:21

    My English is very rotten
    I also encountered this problem,$returnType Defined in Zend\Db\ResultSet\ResultSet
    we can give third argument for Zend\Db\Adapter\Adapter,like this

    $adapter = new Zend\Db\Adapter\Adapter($db_config,null,new Zend\Db\ResultSet\ResultSet('array'));
    $re = $adapter->query('select * from mooncake', $adapter::QUERY_MODE_EXECUTE);
    $s = $re->current();
    var_dump($s);
    

    now,$s is array

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  • 2021-02-08 16:25

    Ok, I think I've got it. At least this will do the job for the time being. Basically, you have to add one extra step and feed the result object into a ResultSet object which has a toArray convenience method. I suppose this could be done a million other ways, but... this works.

    Keep in mind, I wouldn't do this in a controller, or even in this exact way, but its only a test at this point. There's times when I want this available, and this is how ZF2 can do it, if one desired. (never minding good/bad habits)

    In the top of the Controller add/use the ResultSet:

    use Zend\Db\ResultSet\ResultSet;
    

    Here's the working test action:

    public function blaAction()
    {
        $db = new DbAdapter(
            array(
                'driver'        => 'Pdo',
                'dsn'            => 'mysql:dbname=mydb;host=localhost',
                'username'       => 'root',
                'password'       => '',
                )
        );
        $sql = 'select * from customer 
            where cust_nbr > ? and cust_nbr < ?';
        $sql_result = $db->createStatement($sql, array(125000, 125200))->execute();
        if($sql_result->count() > 0){
            $results = new ResultSet();
            $this->view->data = $results->initialize($sql_result)->toArray();
        }
        return $this->view;
    }
    

    toArray is just doing a foreach loop for you, so, I guess its still adding extra array loops I wanted to avoid, but not having looked at ZF1 version of their code, maybe its doing the same anyway.

    What I will probably do is create a simple db wrapper class for Zend\Db that replaces my Zend_Registry statement from ZF1 and adds a fetchAll and fetchOne method, that way I can quickly port over a bunch of ZF1 code to ZF2 much easier.

    Thanks for your input in the comments, I appreciate it. :)

    Oh, I also wanted to mention. I ran into this bridge class someone created, which might also be helpful: https://github.com/fballiano/zfbridge

    EDIT: So the adapter results returned are iterable it turns out. I am not sure what steps I took that led to my confusion, but the results in $db->query are returned as a Pdo\Result object and that can be looped in foreach easy enough. What messed me up was the fact that if you var_dump it,it doesn't show the array data, just the object. That led me down a totally confusing path.

    Now, even though the above works, this is better IMO, because we can take that object, send it where we want for iteration later. (rather than loop over the whole thing to create an array first, only to iterate another loop, waste of time that way)

    Here's a working example I like better. you just loop the object, and there's your data! duh! Not sure how I miss the simple things sometimes. :)

    public function blaAction()
    {
        $db = new DbAdapter(
            array(
                'driver'        => 'Pdo',
                'dsn'            => 'mysql:dbname=gwdb;host=localhost',
                'username'       => 'root',
                'password'       => '',
                )
        );
        $sql = 'select * from customer 
            where cust_nbr > ? and cust_nbr < ?';
    
        $rs = $db->query($sql)->execute(array(125000, 125200));
        // Source of confusion: this doesn't dump the array!!!
        // It dumps the object properties for Pdo\Result
        Debug::dump($rs);
        // but it is still able to iterate records directly
        // without toArray
        foreach ($rs as $row){
            Debug::dump($row);
        }
    
        return $this->view;
    } 
    
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  • 2021-02-08 16:30

    After long search I handel my SQL Query in ZF2 that way

     $sql = new \Zend\Db\Sql\Sql($this->tableGateway->getAdapter());
        $select = $sql->select();
        $select->from('table'); 
        $select->columns(array('*'));
        $select->join("join table", "table.id = join table.id", array("*"), "left");
        $statement = $sql->prepareStatementForSqlObject($select);
        $results = $statement->execute();
        return iterator_to_array($results));
    

    The trick is the PHP function iterator_to_array

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