Fix incorrect title in Transactions.pod
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class-Manual-SQLHackers.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Manual / SQLHackers / UPDATE.pod
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6c2a4396 1=head1 NAME
2
3DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::UPDATE - DBIx::Class for SQL Hackers - UPDATE
4
5=over
6
7=item L<Introduction|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::Introduction>
8
9=item L<CREATE|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::CREATE>
10
11=item L<INSERT|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::INSERT>
12
13=item L<SELECT|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::SELECT>
14
15=item UPDATE
16
17=item L<DELETE|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::DELETE>
18
19=item L<BEGIN, COMMIT|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::Transactions>
20
21=back
22
23=head1 UPDATEing data
24
abc32120 25=head2 Single row delayed update versus direct update
6c2a4396 26
abc32120 27Individual rows may be updated via their Result object in one of two
28ways. You can create an object representing an existing database table
29row and hold it in your programmes memory, passing it around from
30function to function changing its values, before actually updating
31the contents into the database. This is a delayed update.
6c2a4396 32
33A direct update still involves fetching the existing row from the
34database, but instead of storing new column values in the Row object,
35the update method is called and passed the set of new values to store
36in the table.
37
38NOTE: Running a direct update on a row object that already has changed
39values, will *also* apply those values to the database. If values are
40changed both on the object, and in the update method arguments, the
41argument values take precedence.
42
43=head2 Updating a row in memory
44
45To create a Row object for delayed update (or other manipulations), first fetch it from the database as described in L<Simple SELECT|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::SELECT/Simple SELECT>.
46
47=over
48
49=item 1. Create a Schema object representing the database you are working with:
50
51 my $schema = MyDatabase::Schema->connect('dbi:SQLite:my.db');
52
53=item 2. Call the B<find> method on the resultset for the L<ResultSource|DBIx::Class::ResultSource> you wish to update the contents of:
54
55 my $fred_user = $schema->resultset('User')->find({ id => 1 });
56
abc32120 57B<$fred_user>'s contents can now be changed using the accessor
6c2a4396 58methods created by B<add_columns>, back in
59L<CREATE|DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::CREATE>. These are generally named
60after the columns in the database, so to change fred's real name, use
61the B<realname> method.
62
63=item 3. Call the B<realname> accessor method on the $fred_user object:
64
65 $fred_user->realname("John Bloggs");
66
abc32120 67
68This value has not yet changed in the database, we can make the actual
69update by calling *update*:
6c2a4396 70
71=item 4. Update the set value(s) into the database:
72
73 $fred_user->update();
74
75=back
76
abc32120 77The update method will only actually send an UPDATE statement to the
78database if one or more of the columns have changed. The internal
79tracking of which columns have been changed can be queried using
80several methods. B<is_changed> returns true (or a list of changed
81column names), if any column values have changed. B<is_column_changed>
82will return true or false for the given column name argument. The
83previous values of the columns are not stored.
84
85
6c2a4396 86=head2 Update a single row with simple values
87
88 UPDATE users
89 SET username = 'new@email.address'
90 WHERE id = 1;
91
92To update an existing row, first B<find> it using the methods shown in L<DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::SELECT/Simple SELECT, one row via the primary key> or L<DBIx::Class::Manual::SQLHackers::SELECT/Simple SELECT, one row via a unique key>, for example:
93
94=over
95
96=item 1. Create a Schema object representing the database you are working with:
97
98 my $schema = MyDatabase::Schema->connect('dbi:SQLite:my.db');
99
100=item 2. Call the B<find> method on the resultset for the L<ResultSource|DBIx::Class::ResultSource> you wish to fetch data from:
101
102 my $fred_user = $schema->resultset('User')->find({ id => 1 });
103
104 The Row object has an B<update> method that will change the values on
105the object, and send an UPDATE query to the database.
106
107=item 3. Call the B<update> method, passing it a hashref of new data:
108
109 $fred_user->update({ username => 'new@email.address' });
110
111=back
112
113See also: L</Direct update versus delayed update>.
114
bf3e7004 115## Removed from UPDATE.pod:
116
117=head2 Update a row or rows using a column calculation
118
119 -- Yet another pointless example
120 UPDATE users
121 SET username = username || '.uk'
122 WHERE id = 1;
123
124=over
125
126=item 1. Create a Schema object representing the database you are working with:
127
128 my $schema = MyDatabase::Schema->connect('dbi:SQLite:my.db');
129
130=item 2. Call the B<find> method on the resultset for the L<ResultSource|DBIx::Class::ResultSource> you wish to fetch data from:
131
132 my $fred_user = $schema->resultset('User')->find({ id => 1 });
133
134The Row object has an B<update> method that will change the values on
135the object, and send an UPDATE query to the database.
136
137=item 3. Call the B<update> method, passing it a hashref of new data:
138
139 $fred_user->update({ username => \['username || ?', [ {} => '.uk'] ] });
140
141The \[ .. ] syntax here is base on L<SQL::Abstract/Literal SQL with placeholders and bind values (subqueries)>, and adds some extra syntax for the "values" to be able to supply things like the exact SQL bind type and so on. This extra syntax will be documented in DBIx::Class soon.
142
143=back
144
6c2a4396 145=head2 Update multiple rows with simple values
146
147 -- Warning, pointless example!
148 UPDATE users
149 SET dob = '2010-08-16'
150 WHERE realname LIKE 'jess%';
151
152To update a whole set of rows, or all of them, we first need to create a ResultSet object representing the query conditions that would be needed to select that same set of rows. We need to use B<search>, then we use the B<update> method on the ResultSet.
153
154=over
155
156=item 1. Create a Schema object representing the database you are working with:
157
158 my $schema = MyDatabase::Schema->connect('dbi:SQLite:my.db');
159
160=item 2. Call the B<search> method on the resultset for the L<ResultSource|DBIx::Class::ResultSource> you wish to fetch data from:
161
162 my $user_search = $schema->resultset('User')->search(
163 { realname => { like => 'jess%' } }
164 );
165
166=item 3. Call the B<update> method on the resultset to change the matching rows:
167
168 $user_search->update({ dob => '2010-08-16' });
169
170=back
171
6c2a4396 172=head2 Update or create a row
173
174 -- MySQL non-standardness (and another silly example)
175 INSERT INTO users ( ... )
176 VALUES ( ... )
177 ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE password = 'newpass';
178
179 -- OR:
180 BEGIN TRANSACTION;
181 SELECT id, username, dob, realname, password
182 FROM users
183 WHERE username = 'joebloggs';
184
185 UPDATE users
186 SET id = ?, username = ?, dob = ?, realname = ?, password = ?;
187 COMMIT;
188
2f41b1a9 189DBIx::Class does not yet produce the non-standard MySQL "ON DUPLICATE KEY
0e8be732 190UPDATE", instead it has a shortcut for combining B<find> and B<update>.
6c2a4396 191
192To avoid race conditions, this should be done in a transaction.
193
194=over
195
196=item 1. Create a Schema object representing the database you are working with:
197
198 my $schema = MyDatabase::Schema->connect('dbi:SQLite:my.db');
199
200=item 2. Call the B<txn_do> method on the schema object, passing it a coderef to execute inside the transaction:
0e8be732 201
6c2a4396 202 $schema->txn_do( sub {
203
204=item 3. Call the B<update_or_create> method on the resultset for the L<ResultSource|DBIx::Class::ResultSource> you wish to update data in:
205
206 $schema->resultset('User')->update_or_create(
207 {
208 username => 'joebloggs',
209 dob => '2010-09-10',
210 realname = 'Joe Bloggs'
211 },
212 {
213 key => 'uniq_username'
214 }
215 );
216
217=item 4. Close off the transaction / coderef:
218
219 } );
220
221=back
222
223A transaction is issued containing two statements, a B<SELECT> and then
224either an B<INSERT> or an B<UPDATE> depending on the results.
225
226Do not use this method if you definitely don't have either the primary
227key, or a unique index value available. The B<find> method used under
228the hood will probably not do what you expect. In this case, manually
229run a separate B<search> method call to check for existance, and then
230call B<create>.
231