89 lines
2.5 KiB
PHP
89 lines
2.5 KiB
PHP
* The //CONCAT// function returns a string that is a concatenation of its arguments. In the example above we
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map the concatenation of users firstname and lastname to a value called name
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<code type="php">
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$q = new Doctrine_Query();
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$users = $q->select('CONCAT(u.firstname, u.lastname) name')->from('User u')->execute();
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foreach($users as $user) {
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// here 'name' is not a property of $user,
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// its a mapped function value
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print $user->name;
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}
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?>
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</code>
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* The second and third arguments of the //SUBSTRING// function denote the starting position and length of
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the substring to be returned. These arguments are integers. The first position of a string is denoted by 1.
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The //SUBSTRING// function returns a string.
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<code type="php">
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$q = new Doctrine_Query();
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$users = $q->select('u.name')->from('User u')->where("SUBSTRING(u.name, 0, 1) = 'z'")->execute();
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foreach($users as $user) {
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print $user->name;
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}
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?>
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</code>
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* The //TRIM// function trims the specified character from a string. If the character to be trimmed is not
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specified, it is assumed to be space (or blank). The optional trim_character is a single-character string
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literal or a character-valued input parameter (i.e., char or Character)[30]. If a trim specification is
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not provided, BOTH is assumed. The //TRIM// function returns the trimmed string.
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<code type="php">
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$q = new Doctrine_Query();
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$users = $q->select('u.name')->from('User u')->where("TRIM(u.name) = 'Someone'")->execute();
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foreach($users as $user) {
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print $user->name;
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}
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?>
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</code>
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* The //LOWER// and //UPPER// functions convert a string to lower and upper case, respectively. They return a
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string.
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<code type="php">
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$q = new Doctrine_Query();
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$users = $q->select('u.name')->from('User u')->where("LOWER(u.name) = 'someone'")->execute();
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foreach($users as $user) {
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print $user->name;
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}
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?>
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</code>
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* The //LOCATE// function returns the position of a given string within a string, starting the search at a specified
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position. It returns the first position at which the string was found as an integer. The first argument
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is the string to be located; the second argument is the string to be searched; the optional third argument
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is an integer that represents the string position at which the search is started (by default, the beginning of
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the string to be searched). The first position in a string is denoted by 1. If the string is not found, 0 is
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returned.
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* The //LENGTH// function returns the length of the string in characters as an integer.
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