PDOStatement::setFetchMode
(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL pdo >= 0.2.0)
PDOStatement::setFetchMode — この文に対するデフォルトのフェッチモードを設定する
説明
パラメータ
mode
-
フェッチモードは、
PDO::FETCH_*
定数の 1つでなければなりません。 colno
-
カラム番号。
class
-
クラス名。
constructorArgs
-
コンストラクタの引数。
object
-
オブジェクト。
例
例1 フェッチモードを設定する
以下の例は PDOStatement::setFetchMode() がどの様に PDOStatementオブジェクトに対するデフォルトのフェッチモードを 変更するかを例示しています。
<?php
$stmt = $dbh->query('SELECT name, colour, calories FROM fruit');
$stmt->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_NUM);
foreach ($stmt as $row) {
print $row[0] . "\t" . $row[1] . "\t" . $row[2] . "\n";
}
上の例の出力は以下となります。
apple red 150 banana yellow 250 orange orange 300 kiwi brown 75 lemon yellow 25 pear green 150
+add a note
User Contributed Notes 3 notes
Dormilich at netscape dot net ¶
14 years ago
if you want to fetch your result into a class (by using PDO::FETCH_CLASS) and want the constructor to be executed *before* PDO assings the object properties, you need to use the PDO::FETCH_PROPS_LATE constant:
<?php
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("your query");
$stmt->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_CLASS|PDO::FETCH_PROPS_LATE, "className", $constructorArguments);
# pass parameters, if required by the query
$stmt->execute($parameters);
foreach ($stmt as $row)
{
// do something with (each of) your object
}
?>
Kats ¶
7 years ago
Something very helpful is knowing how to access namespaces from the function. It took me a minute (and Google) to figure out. The ::class property is going to be your best friend in this case.
<?php
$stmt->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_CLASS, Name\Space\Class::class);
?>
stein_AT_rhrk.uni-kl.de ¶
17 years ago
Some note on PDO :: FETCH_CLASS | PDO :: FETCH_CLASSTYPE
It took me some time, to realize, that you can not use this fetch-mode in $stm->setFetchMode(), when you want to retrieve objects from the database whereas the type is defined by the first column in the resultset.
You have to define this mode directly in the $stm->fetch() method.
To make it clearer:
$stm = $pdo->query("SELECT * FROM `foo`);
$stm->setFetchMode(FETCH_CLASS | PDO :: FETCH_CLASSTYPE);
$object = $stm->fetch();
Will not return the expected object, whereas
$stm = $pdo->query("SELECT * FROM `foo`");
$object = $stm->fetch(FETCH_CLASS | PDO :: FETCH_CLASSTYPE);
will give you the object of the class, defined in the first column of `foo`.
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