This library provides abstraction methods for common operations on SQLite databases like SELECT
, UPDATE
, and INSERT
using method chaining for the various SQLite features.
For example:
SQLite->for(string $table)
->with(?array $model)
->where(?array ...$conditions)
->order(?array $order_by)
->limit(int|array|null $limit)
->select(array $columns): array|bool;
which would be equivalent to the following in SQLite:
SELECT $columns FROM $table WHERE $filter ORDER BY $order_by LIMIT $limit;
Important
This library is built on top of the PHP SQLite3 Extension
and requires PHP 8.0 or newer.
composer require victorwesterlund/libSQLitedriver
use libsqlitedriver/SQLite;
Available statements
Statement | Method |
---|---|
SELECT |
select() |
UPDATE |
update() |
INSERT |
insert() |
DELETE |
delete() |
WHERE |
where() |
ORDER BY |
order() |
LIMIT |
limit() |
Example table name: beverages
id | beverage_type | beverage_name | beverage_size |
---|---|---|---|
0 | coffee | cappuccino | 10 |
1 | coffee | black | 15 |
2 | tea | green | 10 |
3 | tea | black | 15 |
use libSQLitedriver\SQLite;
// Pass through: https://www.php.net/manual/en/sqlite3.construct.php
$db = new SQLite($filename = ":memory:");
All executor methods select()
, update()
, and insert()
will return a SQLite3Result
object or boolean.
SQLite->for(
string $table
): self;
All queries start by chaining the for(string $table)
method. This will define which database table the current query should be executed on.
Example:
SQLite->for("beverages")->select("beverage_type");
Chain SQLite->select()
anywhere after a SQLite->for()
to retrieve columns from a database table.
Pass an associative array of strings, CSV string, or null to this method to filter columns.
SQLite->select(
array|string|null $columns
): SQLite3Result|bool;
In most cases you probably want to select with a constraint. Chain the where()
method before select()
to filter the query
$beverages = SQLite->for("beverages")->select(["beverage_name", "beverage_size"]); // SELECT beverage_name, beverage_size FROM beverages
[
[
"beverage_name" => "cappuccino",
"beverage_size" => 10
],
[
"beverage_name" => "black",
"beverage_size" => 15
],
// ...etc
]
If you don't want an array of arrays and would instead like to access each key value pair directly. Chain the SQLite->flatten()
anywhere before SQLite->select()
.
This will return the key value pairs of the first entry directly.
Note This method will not set
LIMIT 1
for you. It is recommended to chainSQLite->limit(1)
anywhere beforeSQLite->select()
. You can read more about it here
$coffee = SQLite->for("beverages")->limit(1)->flatten()->select(["beverage_name", "beverage_size"]); // SELECT beverage_name, beverage_size FROM beverages WHERE beverage_type = "coffee" LIMIT 1
[
"beverage_name" => "cappuccino",
"beverage_size" => 10
]
Chain SQLite->insert()
anywhere after a SQLite->for()
to append a new row to a database table.
Passing a sequential array to insert()
will assume that you wish to insert data for all defined columns in the table. Pass an associative array of [column_name => value]
to INSERT data for specific columns (assuming the other columns have a DEFAULT value defined).
SQLite->insert(
// Array of values to INSERT
array $values
): SQLite3Result|bool
// Returns true if row was inserted
SQLite->for("beverages")->insert([
null,
"coffee",
"latte",
10
]);
// INSERT INTO beverages VALUES (null, "coffee", "latte", 10);
true
Chain SQLite->delete()
anywhere after a SQLite->for()
to remove a row or rows from the a database table.
SQLite->delete(
array ...$conditions
): SQLite3Result|bool
// Returns true if at least one row was deleted
This method takes at least one SQLite->where()
-syntaxed argument to determine which row or rows to delete. Refer to the SQLite->where()
section for more information.
SQLite->for("beverages")->insert([
null,
"coffee",
"latte",
10
]);
// INSERT INTO beverages VALUES (null, "coffee", "latte", 10);
true
Chain SQLite->update()
anywhere after a SQLite->for()
to modify existing rows in a database table.
SQLite->update(
// Key, value array of column names and values to update
array $fields,
): SQLite3Result|bool;
// Returns true if at least 1 row was changed
SQLite->for("beverages")->update(["beverage_size" => 10]); // UPDATE beverages SET beverage_size = 10
true
In most cases you probably want to UPDATE against a constaint. Chain a where()
method before SQLite->update()
to set constraints
Filter a SQLite->select()
or SQLite->update()
method by chaining the SQLite->where()
method anywhere before it. The SQLite->delete()
executor method also uses the same syntax for its arguments.
Each key, value pair will be AND
constrained against each other.
SQLite->where(
?array ...$conditions
): self;
$coffee = SQLite->for("beverages")->where(["beverage_type" => "coffee"])->select(["beverage_name", "beverage_size"]); // SELECT beverage_name, beverage_size FROM beverages WHERE (beverage_type = "coffee");
[
[
"beverage_name" => "cappuccino",
"beverage_size" => 10
],
[
"beverage_name" => "black",
"beverage_size" => 15
]
]
Add additional key value pairs to an array passed to where()
and they will all be compared as AND with each other.
SQLite->where([
"beverage_type" => "coffee",
"beverage_size" => 15
]);
WHERE (beverage_type = 'coffee' AND beverage_size = 15)
Passing an additional array of key values as an argument will OR it with all other arrays passed.
$filter1 = [
"beverage_type" => "coffee",
"beverage_size" => 15
];
$filter2 = [
"beverage_type" => "tea",
"beverage_name" => "black"
];
SQLite->where($filter1, $filter2, ...);
WHERE (beverage_type = 'coffee' AND beverage_size = 15) OR (beverage_type = 'tea' AND beverage_name = 'black')
Chain the SQLite->order()
method before a SQLite->select()
statement to order by a specific column
SQLite->order(
?array $order_by
): self;
$coffee = SQLite->for("beverages")->order(["beverage_name" => "ASC"])->select(["beverage_name", "beverage_size"]); // SELECT beverage_name, beverage_size FROM beverages ORDER BY beverage_name ASC
[
[
"beverage_name" => "tea",
"beverage_size" => 10
],
[
"beverage_name" => "tea",
"beverage_size" => 15
],
// ...etc for "beverage_name = coffee"
]
Chain the limit()
method before a SQLite->select()
statement to limit the amount of columns returned
SQLite->limit(
?int $limit,
?int $offset = null
): self;
Note You can also flatten to a single dimensional array from the first entity by chaining
SQLite->flatten()
This will simply LIMIT
the results returned to the integer passed
$coffee = SQLite->for("beverages")->limit(1)->select(["beverage_name", "beverage_size"]); // SELECT beverage_name, beverage_size FROM beverages WHERE beverage_type = "coffee" LIMIT 1
[
[
"beverage_name" => "cappuccino",
"beverage_size" => 10
]
]
This will OFFSET
and LIMIT
the results returned. The first argument will be the LIMIT
and the second argument will be its OFFSET
.
$coffee = SQLite->for("beverages")->limit(3, 2)->select(["beverage_name", "beverage_size"]); // SELECT beverage_name, beverage_size FROM beverages LIMIT 3 OFFSET 2
[
[
"beverage_name" => "tea",
"beverage_size" => 10
],
[
"beverage_name" => "tea",
"beverage_size" => 15
],
// ...etc
]
Chain and pass an array to SQLite->with()
before a select()
, update()
, or insert()
method to limit which columns will be returned/affected. It will use the values of the array so it can be either sequential or associative.
This method will cause select()
, update()
, and insert()
to ignore any columns that are not present in the passed table model.
You can remove an already set table model by passing null
to SQLite->with()