- Introduction
- Selects
- Joins
- Advanced Wheres
- Aggregates
- Raw Expressions
- Inserts
- Updates
- Deletes
- Unions
- Pessimistic Locking
The database query builder provides a convenient, fluent interface to creating and running database queries. It can be used to perform most database operations in your application, and works on all supported database systems.
Note: The Laravel query builder uses PDO parameter binding throughout to protect your application against SQL injection attacks. There is no need to clean strings being passed as bindings.
$users = DB::table('users')->get();
foreach ($users as $user)
{
var_dump($user->name);
}
DB::table('users')->chunk(100, function($users)
{
foreach ($users as $user)
{
//
}
});
You may stop further chunks from being processed by returning false
from the Closure
:
DB::table('users')->chunk(100, function($users)
{
//
return false;
});
$user = DB::table('users')->where('name', 'John')->first();
var_dump($user->name);
$name = DB::table('users')->where('name', 'John')->pluck('name');
$roles = DB::table('roles')->lists('title');
This method will return an array of role titles. You may also specify a custom key column for the returned array:
$roles = DB::table('roles')->lists('title', 'name');
$users = DB::table('users')->select('name', 'email')->get();
$users = DB::table('users')->distinct()->get();
$users = DB::table('users')->select('name as user_name')->get();
$query = DB::table('users')->select('name');
$users = $query->addSelect('age')->get();
$users = DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '>', 100)
->orWhere('name', 'John')
->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereBetween('votes', [1, 100])->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNotBetween('votes', [1, 100])->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereIn('id', [1, 2, 3])->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNotIn('id', [1, 2, 3])->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNull('updated_at')->get();
You may even use "dynamic" where statements to fluently build where statements using magic methods:
$admin = DB::table('users')->whereId(1)->first();
$john = DB::table('users')
->whereIdAndEmail(2, 'john@doe.com')
->first();
$jane = DB::table('users')
->whereNameOrAge('Jane', 22)
->first();
$users = DB::table('users')
->orderBy('name', 'desc')
->groupBy('count')
->having('count', '>', 100)
->get();
$users = DB::table('users')->skip(10)->take(5)->get();
The query builder may also be used to write join statements. Take a look at the following examples:
DB::table('users')
->join('contacts', 'users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')
->join('orders', 'users.id', '=', 'orders.user_id')
->select('users.id', 'contacts.phone', 'orders.price')
->get();
DB::table('users')
->leftJoin('posts', 'users.id', '=', 'posts.user_id')
->get();
You may also specify more advanced join clauses:
DB::table('users')
->join('contacts', function($join)
{
$join->on('users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')->orOn(...);
})
->get();
If you would like to use a "where" style clause on your joins, you may use the where
and orWhere
methods on a join. Instead of comparing two columns, these methods will compare the column against a value:
DB::table('users')
->join('contacts', function($join)
{
$join->on('users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')
->where('contacts.user_id', '>', 5);
})
->get();
Sometimes you may need to create more advanced where clauses such as "where exists" or nested parameter groupings. The Laravel query builder can handle these as well:
DB::table('users')
->where('name', '=', 'John')
->orWhere(function($query)
{
$query->where('votes', '>', 100)
->where('title', '<>', 'Admin');
})
->get();
The query above will produce the following SQL:
select * from users where name = 'John' or (votes > 100 and title <> 'Admin')
DB::table('users')
->whereExists(function($query)
{
$query->select(DB::raw(1))
->from('orders')
->whereRaw('orders.user_id = users.id');
})
->get();
The query above will produce the following SQL:
select * from users
where exists (
select 1 from orders where orders.user_id = users.id
)
The query builder also provides a variety of aggregate methods, such as count
, max
, min
, avg
, and sum
.
$users = DB::table('users')->count();
$price = DB::table('orders')->max('price');
$price = DB::table('orders')->min('price');
$price = DB::table('orders')->avg('price');
$total = DB::table('users')->sum('votes');
Sometimes you may need to use a raw expression in a query. These expressions will be injected into the query as strings, so be careful not to create any SQL injection points! To create a raw expression, you may use the DB::raw
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->select(DB::raw('count(*) as user_count, status'))
->where('status', '<>', 1)
->groupBy('status')
->get();
DB::table('users')->insert(
['email' => 'john@example.com', 'votes' => 0]
);
If the table has an auto-incrementing id, use insertGetId
to insert a record and retrieve the id:
$id = DB::table('users')->insertGetId(
['email' => 'john@example.com', 'votes' => 0]
);
Note: When using PostgreSQL the insertGetId method expects the auto-incrementing column to be named "id".
DB::table('users')->insert([
['email' => 'taylor@example.com', 'votes' => 0],
['email' => 'dayle@example.com', 'votes' => 0]
]);
DB::table('users')
->where('id', 1)
->update(['votes' => 1]);
DB::table('users')->increment('votes');
DB::table('users')->increment('votes', 5);
DB::table('users')->decrement('votes');
DB::table('users')->decrement('votes', 5);
You may also specify additional columns to update:
DB::table('users')->increment('votes', 1, ['name' => 'John']);
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '<', 100)->delete();
DB::table('users')->delete();
DB::table('users')->truncate();
The query builder also provides a quick way to "union" two queries together:
$first = DB::table('users')->whereNull('first_name');
$users = DB::table('users')->whereNull('last_name')->union($first)->get();
The unionAll
method is also available, and has the same method signature as union
.
The query builder includes a few functions to help you do "pessimistic locking" on your SELECT statements.
To run the SELECT statement with a "shared lock", you may use the sharedLock
method on a query:
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->sharedLock()->get();
To "lock for update" on a SELECT statement, you may use the lockForUpdate
method on a query:
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->lockForUpdate()->get();