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doctrine2/lib/Doctrine/DBAL/Driver/Statement.php

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<?php
/*
* $Id$
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
* "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
* A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
* OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
* SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
* OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many individuals
* and is licensed under the LGPL. For more information, see
* <http://www.doctrine-project.org>.
*/
namespace Doctrine\DBAL\Driver;
use Doctrine\DBAL\Connection as DBALConnection;
/**
* Statement interface.
* Drivers must implement this interface.
*
* This resembles (a subset of) the PDOStatement interface.
*
* @author Konsta Vesterinen <kvesteri@cc.hut.fi>
* @author Roman Borschel <roman@code-factory.org>
* @license http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-license.php LGPL
* @link www.doctrine-project.org
* @since 2.0
* @version $Revision$
*/
interface Statement
{
/**
* Bind a column to a PHP variable
*
* @param mixed $column Number of the column (1-indexed) or name of the column in the result set.
* If using the column name, be aware that the name should match
* the case of the column, as returned by the driver.
* @param string $param Name of the PHP variable to which the column will be bound.
* @param integer $type Data type of the parameter, specified by the PDO::PARAM_* constants.
* @return boolean Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure
*/
function bindColumn($column, &$param, $type = null);
/**
* Binds a value to a corresponding named or positional
* placeholder in the SQL statement that was used to prepare the statement.
*
* @param mixed $param Parameter identifier. For a prepared statement using named placeholders,
* this will be a parameter name of the form :name. For a prepared statement
* using question mark placeholders, this will be the 1-indexed position of the parameter
*
* @param mixed $value The value to bind to the parameter.
* @param integer $type Explicit data type for the parameter using the PDO::PARAM_* constants.
*
* @return boolean Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
*/
function bindValue($param, $value, $type = null);
/**
* Binds a PHP variable to a corresponding named or question mark placeholder in the
* SQL statement that was use to prepare the statement. Unlike PDOStatement->bindValue(),
* the variable is bound as a reference and will only be evaluated at the time
* that PDOStatement->execute() is called.
*
* Most parameters are input parameters, that is, parameters that are
* used in a read-only fashion to build up the query. Some drivers support the invocation
* of stored procedures that return data as output parameters, and some also as input/output
* parameters that both send in data and are updated to receive it.
*
* @param mixed $param Parameter identifier. For a prepared statement using named placeholders,
* this will be a parameter name of the form :name. For a prepared statement
* using question mark placeholders, this will be the 1-indexed position of the parameter
*
* @param mixed $variable Name of the PHP variable to bind to the SQL statement parameter.
*
* @param integer $type Explicit data type for the parameter using the PDO::PARAM_* constants. To return
* an INOUT parameter from a stored procedure, use the bitwise OR operator to set the
* PDO::PARAM_INPUT_OUTPUT bits for the data_type parameter.
*
* @param integer $length Length of the data type. To indicate that a parameter is an OUT parameter
* from a stored procedure, you must explicitly set the length.
* @param mixed $driverOptions
* @return boolean Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
*/
function bindParam($column, &$variable, $type = null, $length = null, $driverOptions = array());
/**
* Closes the cursor, enabling the statement to be executed again.
*
* @return boolean Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
*/
function closeCursor();
/**
* columnCount
* Returns the number of columns in the result set
*
* @return integer Returns the number of columns in the result set represented
* by the PDOStatement object. If there is no result set,
* this method should return 0.
*/
function columnCount();
/**
* errorCode
* Fetch the SQLSTATE associated with the last operation on the statement handle
*
* @see Doctrine_Adapter_Interface::errorCode()
* @return string error code string
*/
function errorCode();
/**
* errorInfo
* Fetch extended error information associated with the last operation on the statement handle
*
* @see Doctrine_Adapter_Interface::errorInfo()
* @return array error info array
*/
function errorInfo();
/**
* Executes a prepared statement
*
* If the prepared statement included parameter markers, you must either:
* call PDOStatement->bindParam() to bind PHP variables to the parameter markers:
* bound variables pass their value as input and receive the output value,
* if any, of their associated parameter markers or pass an array of input-only
* parameter values
*
*
* @param array $params An array of values with as many elements as there are
* bound parameters in the SQL statement being executed.
* @return boolean Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
*/
function execute($params = array());
/**
* fetch
*
* @see Query::HYDRATE_* constants
* @param integer $fetchStyle Controls how the next row will be returned to the caller.
* This value must be one of the Query::HYDRATE_* constants,
* defaulting to Query::HYDRATE_BOTH
*
* @param integer $cursorOrientation For a PDOStatement object representing a scrollable cursor,
* this value determines which row will be returned to the caller.
* This value must be one of the Query::HYDRATE_ORI_* constants, defaulting to
* Query::HYDRATE_ORI_NEXT. To request a scrollable cursor for your
* PDOStatement object,
* you must set the PDO::ATTR_CURSOR attribute to Doctrine::CURSOR_SCROLL when you
* prepare the SQL statement with Doctrine_Adapter_Interface->prepare().
*
* @param integer $cursorOffset For a PDOStatement object representing a scrollable cursor for which the
* $cursorOrientation parameter is set to Query::HYDRATE_ORI_ABS, this value specifies
* the absolute number of the row in the result set that shall be fetched.
*
* For a PDOStatement object representing a scrollable cursor for
* which the $cursorOrientation parameter is set to Query::HYDRATE_ORI_REL, this value
* specifies the row to fetch relative to the cursor position before
* PDOStatement->fetch() was called.
*
* @return mixed
*/
function fetch($fetchStyle = DBALConnection::FETCH_BOTH);
/**
* Returns an array containing all of the result set rows
*
* @param integer $fetchStyle Controls how the next row will be returned to the caller.
* This value must be one of the Query::HYDRATE_* constants,
* defaulting to Query::HYDRATE_BOTH
*
* @param integer $columnIndex Returns the indicated 0-indexed column when the value of $fetchStyle is
* Query::HYDRATE_COLUMN. Defaults to 0.
*
* @return array
*/
function fetchAll($fetchStyle = DBALConnection::FETCH_BOTH);
/**
* fetchColumn
* Returns a single column from the next row of a
* result set or FALSE if there are no more rows.
*
* @param integer $columnIndex 0-indexed number of the column you wish to retrieve from the row. If no
* value is supplied, PDOStatement->fetchColumn()
* fetches the first column.
*
* @return string returns a single column in the next row of a result set.
*/
function fetchColumn($columnIndex = 0);
/**
* rowCount
* rowCount() returns the number of rows affected by the last DELETE, INSERT, or UPDATE statement
* executed by the corresponding object.
*
* If the last SQL statement executed by the associated Statement object was a SELECT statement,
* some databases may return the number of rows returned by that statement. However,
* this behaviour is not guaranteed for all databases and should not be
* relied on for portable applications.
*
* @return integer Returns the number of rows.
*/
function rowCount();
}