Added "The DBIX::Class way" by Adam Jacob
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Manual / Cookbook.pod
CommitLineData
3b44ccc6 1=head1 NAME
9c82c181 2
40dbc108 3DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook - Miscellaneous recipes
ee38fa40 4
40dbc108 5=head1 RECIPES
2913b2d3 6
bade79c4 7=head2 Searching
faf62551 8
bade79c4 9=head3 Paged results
faf62551 10
bade79c4 11When you expect a large number of results, you can ask L<DBIx::Class> for a
12paged resultset, which will fetch only a small number of records at a time:
faf62551 13
bade79c4 14 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 15 undef,
bade79c4 16 {
17 page => 1, # page to return (defaults to 1)
18 rows => 10, # number of results per page
19 },
20 );
faf62551 21
bade79c4 22 return $rs->all(); # all records for page 1
faf62551 23
bade79c4 24The C<page> attribute does not have to be specified in your search:
25
26 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 27 undef,
bade79c4 28 {
29 rows => 10,
30 }
31 );
faf62551 32
bade79c4 33 return $rs->page(1); # DBIx::Class::ResultSet containing first 10 records
faf62551 34
35In either of the above cases, you can return a L<Data::Page> object for the
bade79c4 36resultset (suitable for use in e.g. a template) using the C<pager> method:
faf62551 37
bade79c4 38 return $rs->pager();
faf62551 39
bade79c4 40=head3 Complex WHERE clauses
2913b2d3 41
40dbc108 42Sometimes you need to formulate a query using specific operators:
43
ea6309e2 44 my @albums = $schema->resultset('Album')->search({
35d4fe78 45 artist => { 'like', '%Lamb%' },
46 title => { 'like', '%Fear of Fours%' },
47 });
40dbc108 48
49This results in something like the following C<WHERE> clause:
50
35d4fe78 51 WHERE artist LIKE '%Lamb%' AND title LIKE '%Fear of Fours%'
40dbc108 52
53Other queries might require slightly more complex logic:
54
ea6309e2 55 my @albums = $schema->resultset('Album')->search({
35d4fe78 56 -or => [
57 -and => [
58 artist => { 'like', '%Smashing Pumpkins%' },
59 title => 'Siamese Dream',
60 ],
61 artist => 'Starchildren',
62 ],
63 });
40dbc108 64
65This results in the following C<WHERE> clause:
66
35d4fe78 67 WHERE ( artist LIKE '%Smashing Pumpkins%' AND title = 'Siamese Dream' )
68 OR artist = 'Starchildren'
40dbc108 69
70For more information on generating complex queries, see
71L<SQL::Abstract/WHERE CLAUSES>.
ee38fa40 72
bade79c4 73=head3 Using specific columns
faf62551 74
bade79c4 75When you only want selected columns from a table, you can use C<cols> to
76specify which ones you need:
faf62551 77
bade79c4 78 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 79 undef,
bade79c4 80 {
5e8b1b2a 81 columns => [qw/ name /]
bade79c4 82 }
83 );
faf62551 84
bade79c4 85 # Equivalent SQL:
86 # SELECT artist.name FROM artist
faf62551 87
bade79c4 88=head3 Using database functions or stored procedures
faf62551 89
bade79c4 90The combination of C<select> and C<as> can be used to return the result of a
91database function or stored procedure as a column value. You use C<select> to
92specify the source for your column value (e.g. a column name, function, or
93stored procedure name). You then use C<as> to set the column name you will use
94to access the returned value:
faf62551 95
bade79c4 96 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 97 undef,
bade79c4 98 {
99 select => [ 'name', { LENGTH => 'name' } ],
100 as => [qw/ name name_length /],
101 }
102 );
faf62551 103
bade79c4 104 # Equivalent SQL:
105 # SELECT name name, LENGTH( name ) name_length
106 # FROM artist
faf62551 107
108If your alias exists as a column in your base class (i.e. it was added with
bade79c4 109C<add_columns>), you just access it as normal. Our C<Artist> class has a C<name>
110column, so we just use the C<name> accessor:
faf62551 111
bade79c4 112 my $artist = $rs->first();
113 my $name = $artist->name();
faf62551 114
115If on the other hand the alias does not correspond to an existing column, you
bade79c4 116can get the value using the C<get_column> accessor:
faf62551 117
bade79c4 118 my $name_length = $artist->get_column('name_length');
faf62551 119
bade79c4 120If you don't like using C<get_column>, you can always create an accessor for
faf62551 121any of your aliases using either of these:
122
bade79c4 123 # Define accessor manually:
124 sub name_length { shift->get_column('name_length'); }
faf62551 125
bade79c4 126 # Or use DBIx::Class::AccessorGroup:
127 __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('column' => 'name_length');
faf62551 128
bade79c4 129=head3 SELECT DISTINCT with multiple columns
faf62551 130
bade79c4 131 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Foo')->search(
5e8b1b2a 132 undef,
bade79c4 133 {
134 select => [
135 { distinct => [ $source->columns ] }
136 ],
137 as => [ $source->columns ]
138 }
139 );
faf62551 140
286f32b3 141 my $count = $rs->next->get_column('count');
142
bade79c4 143=head3 SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT colname)
6607ee1b 144
bade79c4 145 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Foo')->search(
5e8b1b2a 146 undef,
bade79c4 147 {
148 select => [
149 { count => { distinct => 'colname' } }
150 ],
151 as => [ 'count' ]
152 }
153 );
6607ee1b 154
bade79c4 155=head3 Grouping results
156
157L<DBIx::Class> supports C<GROUP BY> as follows:
158
159 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 160 undef,
bade79c4 161 {
162 join => [qw/ cds /],
163 select => [ 'name', { count => 'cds.cdid' } ],
164 as => [qw/ name cd_count /],
165 group_by => [qw/ name /]
166 }
167 );
6607ee1b 168
bade79c4 169 # Equivalent SQL:
170 # SELECT name, COUNT( cds.cdid ) FROM artist me
171 # LEFT JOIN cd cds ON ( cds.artist = me.artistid )
172 # GROUP BY name
6607ee1b 173
74dc2edc 174=head3 Predefined searches
175
176You can write your own DBIx::Class::ResultSet class by inheriting from it
177and define often used searches as methods:
178
179 package My::DBIC::ResultSet::CD;
180 use strict;
181 use warnings;
182 use base 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet';
183
184 sub search_cds_ordered {
185 my ($self) = @_;
186
187 return $self->search(
188 {},
189 { order_by => 'name DESC' },
190 );
191 }
192
193 1;
194
195To use your resultset, first tell DBIx::Class to create an instance of it
196for you, in your My::DBIC::Schema::CD class:
197
198 __PACKAGE__->resultset_class('My::DBIC::ResultSet::CD');
199
200Then call your new method in your code:
201
202 my $ordered_cds = $schema->resultset('CD')->search_cds_ordered();
203
204
d6ed6a67 205=head3 Predefined searches without writing a ResultSet class
206
207Alternatively you can automatically generate a DBIx::Class::ResultSet
208class by using the ResultSetManager component and tagging your method
209as ResultSet:
210
211 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/ ResultSetManager Core /);
212
213 sub search_cds_ordered : ResultSet {
214 my ($self) = @_;
215 return $self->search(
216 {},
217 { order_by => 'name DESC' },
218 );
219 }
220
221Then call your method in the same way from your code:
222
223 my $ordered_cds = $schema->resultset('CD')->search_cds_ordered();
224
87980de7 225=head2 Using joins and prefetch
226
bade79c4 227You can use the C<join> attribute to allow searching on, or sorting your
228results by, one or more columns in a related table. To return all CDs matching
229a particular artist name:
ea6309e2 230
bade79c4 231 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
232 {
233 'artist.name' => 'Bob Marley'
234 },
235 {
236 join => [qw/artist/], # join the artist table
237 }
238 );
239
240 # Equivalent SQL:
241 # SELECT cd.* FROM cd
242 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
243 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
244
245If required, you can now sort on any column in the related tables by including
246it in your C<order_by> attribute:
247
248 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
249 {
250 'artist.name' => 'Bob Marley'
251 },
252 {
253 join => [qw/ artist /],
254 order_by => [qw/ artist.name /]
255 }
256 };
ea6309e2 257
bade79c4 258 # Equivalent SQL:
259 # SELECT cd.* FROM cd
260 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
261 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
262 # ORDER BY artist.name
ea6309e2 263
bade79c4 264Note that the C<join> attribute should only be used when you need to search or
265sort using columns in a related table. Joining related tables when you only
266need columns from the main table will make performance worse!
ea6309e2 267
bade79c4 268Now let's say you want to display a list of CDs, each with the name of the
269artist. The following will work fine:
ea6309e2 270
bade79c4 271 while (my $cd = $rs->next) {
272 print "CD: " . $cd->title . ", Artist: " . $cd->artist->name;
273 }
ea6309e2 274
bade79c4 275There is a problem however. We have searched both the C<cd> and C<artist> tables
276in our main query, but we have only returned data from the C<cd> table. To get
277the artist name for any of the CD objects returned, L<DBIx::Class> will go back
278to the database:
ea6309e2 279
bade79c4 280 SELECT artist.* FROM artist WHERE artist.id = ?
ea6309e2 281
282A statement like the one above will run for each and every CD returned by our
283main query. Five CDs, five extra queries. A hundred CDs, one hundred extra
284queries!
285
bade79c4 286Thankfully, L<DBIx::Class> has a C<prefetch> attribute to solve this problem.
897342e4 287This allows you to fetch results from related tables in advance:
ea6309e2 288
bade79c4 289 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
290 {
291 'artist.name' => 'Bob Marley'
292 },
293 {
294 join => [qw/ artist /],
295 order_by => [qw/ artist.name /],
296 prefetch => [qw/ artist /] # return artist data too!
297 }
298 );
ea6309e2 299
bade79c4 300 # Equivalent SQL (note SELECT from both "cd" and "artist"):
301 # SELECT cd.*, artist.* FROM cd
302 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
303 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
304 # ORDER BY artist.name
ea6309e2 305
306The code to print the CD list remains the same:
307
bade79c4 308 while (my $cd = $rs->next) {
309 print "CD: " . $cd->title . ", Artist: " . $cd->artist->name;
310 }
ea6309e2 311
bade79c4 312L<DBIx::Class> has now prefetched all matching data from the C<artist> table,
ea6309e2 313so no additional SQL statements are executed. You now have a much more
314efficient query.
315
77d6b403 316Note that as of L<DBIx::Class> 0.05999_01, C<prefetch> I<can> be used with
317C<has_many> relationships.
ea6309e2 318
bade79c4 319Also note that C<prefetch> should only be used when you know you will
ea6309e2 320definitely use data from a related table. Pre-fetching related tables when you
321only need columns from the main table will make performance worse!
322
bade79c4 323=head3 Multi-step joins
ea6309e2 324
325Sometimes you want to join more than one relationship deep. In this example,
bade79c4 326we want to find all C<Artist> objects who have C<CD>s whose C<LinerNotes>
327contain a specific string:
328
329 # Relationships defined elsewhere:
330 # Artist->has_many('cds' => 'CD', 'artist');
331 # CD->has_one('liner_notes' => 'LinerNotes', 'cd');
332
333 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
334 {
335 'liner_notes.notes' => { 'like', '%some text%' },
336 },
337 {
338 join => {
339 'cds' => 'liner_notes'
340 }
341 }
342 );
ea6309e2 343
bade79c4 344 # Equivalent SQL:
345 # SELECT artist.* FROM artist
346 # JOIN ( cd ON artist.id = cd.artist )
347 # JOIN ( liner_notes ON cd.id = liner_notes.cd )
348 # WHERE liner_notes.notes LIKE '%some text%'
ea6309e2 349
350Joins can be nested to an arbitrary level. So if we decide later that we
351want to reduce the number of Artists returned based on who wrote the liner
352notes:
353
bade79c4 354 # Relationship defined elsewhere:
355 # LinerNotes->belongs_to('author' => 'Person');
356
357 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
358 {
359 'liner_notes.notes' => { 'like', '%some text%' },
360 'author.name' => 'A. Writer'
361 },
362 {
363 join => {
364 'cds' => {
365 'liner_notes' => 'author'
ea6309e2 366 }
bade79c4 367 }
368 }
369 );
ea6309e2 370
bade79c4 371 # Equivalent SQL:
372 # SELECT artist.* FROM artist
373 # JOIN ( cd ON artist.id = cd.artist )
374 # JOIN ( liner_notes ON cd.id = liner_notes.cd )
375 # JOIN ( author ON author.id = liner_notes.author )
376 # WHERE liner_notes.notes LIKE '%some text%'
377 # AND author.name = 'A. Writer'
87980de7 378
897342e4 379=head2 Multi-step prefetch
380
381From 0.04999_05 onwards, C<prefetch> can be nested more than one relationship
382deep using the same syntax as a multi-step join:
383
384 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Tag')->search(
5e8b1b2a 385 undef,
897342e4 386 {
387 prefetch => {
388 cd => 'artist'
389 }
390 }
391 );
392
393 # Equivalent SQL:
394 # SELECT tag.*, cd.*, artist.* FROM tag
395 # JOIN cd ON tag.cd = cd.cdid
396 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.artistid
397
398Now accessing our C<cd> and C<artist> relationships does not need additional
399SQL statements:
400
401 my $tag = $rs->first;
402 print $tag->cd->artist->name;
403
87980de7 404=head2 Transactions
405
406As of version 0.04001, there is improved transaction support in
181a28f4 407L<DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI> and L<DBIx::Class::Schema>. Here is an
408example of the recommended way to use it:
87980de7 409
181a28f4 410 my $genus = $schema->resultset('Genus')->find(12);
411
70634260 412 my $coderef2 = sub {
413 $genus->extinct(1);
414 $genus->update;
415 };
416
181a28f4 417 my $coderef1 = sub {
35d4fe78 418 $genus->add_to_species({ name => 'troglodyte' });
419 $genus->wings(2);
420 $genus->update;
70634260 421 $schema->txn_do($coderef2); # Can have a nested transaction
181a28f4 422 return $genus->species;
423 };
424
181a28f4 425 my $rs;
426 eval {
70634260 427 $rs = $schema->txn_do($coderef1);
181a28f4 428 };
429
430 if ($@) { # Transaction failed
431 die "the sky is falling!" #
432 if ($@ =~ /Rollback failed/); # Rollback failed
433
434 deal_with_failed_transaction();
35d4fe78 435 }
87980de7 436
181a28f4 437Nested transactions will work as expected. That is, only the outermost
438transaction will actually issue a commit to the $dbh, and a rollback
439at any level of any transaction will cause the entire nested
440transaction to fail. Support for savepoints and for true nested
40dbc108 441transactions (for databases that support them) will hopefully be added
442in the future.
ee38fa40 443
130c6439 444=head2 Many-to-many relationships
ee38fa40 445
ea6309e2 446This is straightforward using L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::ManyToMany>:
447
bade79c4 448 package My::DB;
449 # ... set up connection ...
450
451 package My::User;
452 use base 'My::DB';
453 __PACKAGE__->table('user');
454 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/id name/);
455 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('id');
456 __PACKAGE__->has_many('user_address' => 'My::UserAddress', 'user');
457 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('addresses' => 'user_address', 'address');
458
459 package My::UserAddress;
460 use base 'My::DB';
461 __PACKAGE__->table('user_address');
462 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/user address/);
463 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key(qw/user address/);
464 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to('user' => 'My::User');
465 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to('address' => 'My::Address');
466
467 package My::Address;
468 use base 'My::DB';
469 __PACKAGE__->table('address');
470 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/id street town area_code country/);
471 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('id');
472 __PACKAGE__->has_many('user_address' => 'My::UserAddress', 'address');
473 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('users' => 'user_address', 'user');
474
475 $rs = $user->addresses(); # get all addresses for a user
476 $rs = $address->users(); # get all users for an address
477
478=head2 Setting default values for a row
a00e1684 479
35d4fe78 480It's as simple as overriding the C<new> method. Note the use of
40dbc108 481C<next::method>.
a00e1684 482
35d4fe78 483 sub new {
484 my ( $class, $attrs ) = @_;
40dbc108 485
35d4fe78 486 $attrs->{foo} = 'bar' unless defined $attrs->{foo};
40dbc108 487
35d4fe78 488 $class->next::method($attrs);
489 }
a00e1684 490
4a3c6354 491For more information about C<next::method>, look in the L<Class::C3>
492documentation. See also L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Component> for more
493ways to write your own base classes to do this.
494
495People looking for ways to do "triggers" with DBIx::Class are probably
496just looking for this.
497
25af00d7 498=head2 Stringification
499
40dbc108 500Employ the standard stringification technique by using the C<overload>
35d4fe78 501module. Replace C<foo> with the column/method of your choice.
25af00d7 502
35d4fe78 503 use overload '""' => 'foo', fallback => 1;
25af00d7 504
bade79c4 505=head2 Disconnecting cleanly
506
507If you find yourself quitting an app with Control-C a lot during
508development, you might like to put the following signal handler in
509your main database class to make sure it disconnects cleanly:
510
511 $SIG{INT} = sub {
6d1bf0a9 512 __PACKAGE__->storage->disconnect;
bade79c4 513 };
514
362500af 515=head2 Schema import/export
516
517This functionality requires you to have L<SQL::Translator> (also known as
518"SQL Fairy") installed.
519
520To create a DBIx::Class schema from an existing database:
521
522 sqlt --from DBI
523 --to DBIx::Class::File
524 --prefix "MySchema" > MySchema.pm
525
526To create a MySQL database from an existing L<DBIx::Class> schema, convert the
527schema to MySQL's dialect of SQL:
528
529 sqlt --from DBIx::Class --to MySQL --DBIx::Class "MySchema.pm" > Schema1.sql
530
531And import using the mysql client:
532
533 mysql -h "host" -D "database" -u "user" -p < Schema1.sql
534
b0a20454 535=head2 Easy migration from class-based to schema-based setup
536
537You want to start using the schema-based approach to L<DBIx::Class>
538(see L<SchemaIntro.pod>), but have an established class-based setup with lots
539of existing classes that you don't want to move by hand. Try this nifty script
540instead:
541
542 use MyDB;
543 use SQL::Translator;
544
545 my $schema = MyDB->schema_instance;
546
547 my $translator = SQL::Translator->new(
548 debug => $debug || 0,
549 trace => $trace || 0,
550 no_comments => $no_comments || 0,
551 show_warnings => $show_warnings || 0,
552 add_drop_table => $add_drop_table || 0,
553 validate => $validate || 0,
554 parser_args => {
555 'DBIx::Schema' => $schema,
c5f36986 556 },
b0a20454 557 producer_args => {
558 'prefix' => 'My::Schema',
c5f36986 559 },
b0a20454 560 );
561
d240abac 562 $translator->parser('SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class');
563 $translator->producer('SQL::Translator::Producer::DBIx::Class::File');
b0a20454 564
565 my $output = $translator->translate(@args) or die
566 "Error: " . $translator->error;
567
568 print $output;
569
570You could use L<Module::Find> to search for all subclasses in the MyDB::*
880a1a0c 571namespace, which is currently left as an exercise for the reader.
b0a20454 572
362500af 573=head2 Schema versioning
574
575The following example shows simplistically how you might use DBIx::Class to
576deploy versioned schemas to your customers. The basic process is as follows:
577
da4779ad 578=over 4
579
580=item 1.
581
582Create a DBIx::Class schema
583
584=item 2.
585
586Save the schema
587
588=item 3.
589
590Deploy to customers
591
592=item 4.
593
594Modify schema to change functionality
595
596=item 5.
597
598Deploy update to customers
599
600=back
362500af 601
602=head3 Create a DBIx::Class schema
603
604This can either be done manually, or generated from an existing database as
605described under C<Schema import/export>.
606
607=head3 Save the schema
608
609Use C<sqlt> to transform your schema into an SQL script suitable for your
610customer's database. E.g. for MySQL:
611
612 sqlt --from DBIx::Class
613 --to MySQL
614 --DBIx::Class "MySchema.pm" > Schema1.mysql.sql
615
616If you need to target databases from multiple vendors, just generate an SQL
617script suitable for each. To support PostgreSQL too:
618
619 sqlt --from DBIx::Class
620 --to PostgreSQL
621 --DBIx::Class "MySchema.pm" > Schema1.pgsql.sql
622
623=head3 Deploy to customers
624
625There are several ways you could deploy your schema. These are probably
626beyond the scope of this recipe, but might include:
627
da4779ad 628=over 4
629
630=item 1.
631
632Require customer to apply manually using their RDBMS.
633
634=item 2.
635
636Package along with your app, making database dump/schema update/tests
362500af 637all part of your install.
638
da4779ad 639=back
640
362500af 641=head3 Modify the schema to change functionality
642
643As your application evolves, it may be necessary to modify your schema to
644change functionality. Once the changes are made to your schema in DBIx::Class,
645export the modified schema as before, taking care not to overwrite the original:
646
647 sqlt --from DBIx::Class
648 --to MySQL
649 --DBIx::Class "Anything.pm" > Schema2.mysql.sql
650
651Next, use sqlt-diff to create an SQL script that will update the customer's
652database schema:
653
654 sqlt-diff --to MySQL Schema1=MySQL Schema2=MySQL > SchemaUpdate.mysql.sql
655
656=head3 Deploy update to customers
657
658The schema update can be deployed to customers using the same method as before.
659
7be93b07 660=head2 Setting limit dialect for SQL::Abstract::Limit
661
662In some cases, SQL::Abstract::Limit cannot determine the dialect of the remote
663SQL-server by looking at the database-handle. This is a common problem when
664using the DBD::JDBC, since the DBD-driver only know that in has a Java-driver
665available, not which JDBC-driver the Java component has loaded.
666This specifically sets the limit_dialect to Microsoft SQL-server (Se more names
667in SQL::Abstract::Limit -documentation.
668
669 __PACKAGE__->storage->sql_maker->limit_dialect('mssql');
670
671The JDBC-bridge is one way of getting access to a MSSQL-server from a platform
672that Microsoft doesn't deliver native client libraries for. (e.g. Linux)
673
2437a1e3 674=head2 Setting quotes for the generated SQL.
675
676If the database contains columnames with spaces and/or reserved words, the
677SQL-query needs to be quoted. This is done using:
678
679 __PACKAGE__->storage->sql_maker->quote_char([ qw/[ ]/] );
680 __PACKAGE__->storage->sql_maker->name_sep('.');
681
682The first sets the quotesymbols. If the quote i "symmetric" as " or '
683
684 __PACKAGE__->storage->sql_maker->quote_char('"');
685
880a1a0c 686is enough. If the left quote differs form the right quote, the first
2437a1e3 687notation should be used. name_sep needs to be set to allow the
688SQL generator to put the quotes the correct place.
689
086b93a2 690=head2 Overloading methods
691
692L<DBIx::Class> uses the L<Class::C3> package, which provides for redispatch of
693method calls. You have to use calls to C<next::method> to overload methods.
694More information on using L<Class::C3> with L<DBIx::Class> can be found in
695L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Component>.
696
697=head3 Changing one field whenever another changes
698
699For example, say that you have three columns, C<id>, C<number>, and
700C<squared>. You would like to make changes to C<number> and have
701C<squared> be automagically set to the value of C<number> squared.
702You can accomplish this by overriding C<store_column>:
703
704 sub store_column {
705 my ( $self, $name, $value ) = @_;
706 if ($name eq 'number') {
707 $self->squared($value * $value);
708 }
709 $self->next::method($name, $value);
710 }
711
712Note that the hard work is done by the call to C<next::method>, which
713redispatches your call to store_column to the superclass(es).
714
715=head3 Automatically creating related objects
716
717You might have a class C<Artist> which has many C<CD>s. Further, you
718want to create a C<CD> object every time you insert an C<Artist> object.
719You can accomplish this by overriding C<insert>:
720
721 sub insert {
722 my ( $class, $args_ref ) = @_;
723 my $self = $class->next::method($args_ref);
724 $self->cds->new({})->fill_from_artist($self)->insert;
725 return $self;
726 }
727
728where C<fill_from_artist> is a method you specify in C<CD> which sets
729values in C<CD> based on the data in the C<Artist> object you pass in.
730
1def3451 731=head2 Debugging DBIx::Class objects with Data::Dumper
732
733L<Data::Dumper> can be a very useful tool for debugging, but sometimes it can
734be hard to find the pertinent data in all the data it can generate.
735Specifically, if one naively tries to use it like so,
736
737 use Data::Dumper;
738
739 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find(1);
740 print Dumper($cd);
741
742several pages worth of data from the CD object's schema and result source will
743be dumped to the screen. Since usually one is only interested in a few column
744values of the object, this is not very helpful.
745
746Luckily, it is possible to modify the data before L<Data::Dumper> outputs
747it. Simply define a hook that L<Data::Dumper> will call on the object before
748dumping it. For example,
749
750 package My::DB::CD;
751
752 sub _dumper_hook {
99fb1058 753 $_[0] = bless {
754 %{ $_[0] },
1def3451 755 result_source => undef,
99fb1058 756 }, ref($_[0]);
1def3451 757 }
758
759 [...]
760
761 use Data::Dumper;
762
763 $Data::Dumper::Freezer = '_dumper_hook';
764
765 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find(1);
766 print Dumper($cd);
767 # dumps $cd without its ResultSource
768
769If the structure of your schema is such that there is a common base class for
770all your table classes, simply put a method similar to C<_dumper_hook> in the
771base class and set C<$Data::Dumper::Freezer> to its name and L<Data::Dumper>
772will automagically clean up your data before printing it. See
773L<Data::Dumper/EXAMPLES> for more information.
774
1def3451 775=head2 Retrieving a row object's Schema
776
777It is possible to get a Schema object from a row object like so,
778
779 my $schema = $cd->result_source->schema;
780 my $artist_rs = $schema->resultset('Artist');
781 # for example
782
783This can be useful when you don't want to pass around a Schema object to every
784method.
785
e8e9e5c7 786=head2 Getting the value of the primary key for the last database insert
787
74413b83 788AKA getting last_insert_id
789
e8e9e5c7 790If you are using PK::Auto, this is straightforward:
791
74413b83 792 my $foo = $rs->create(\%blah);
e8e9e5c7 793 # do more stuff
794 my $id = $foo->id; # foo->my_primary_key_field will also work.
795
796If you are not using autoincrementing primary keys, this will probably
797not work, but then you already know the value of the last primary key anyway.
798
40dbc108 799=cut