oops, bogus many_to_many example in pod
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Relationship.pm
CommitLineData
b8e1e21f 1package DBIx::Class::Relationship;
2
3use strict;
4use warnings;
5
1edd1722 6use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
55e2d745 7
07037f89 8__PACKAGE__->load_own_components(qw/
7411204b 9 Helpers
07037f89 10 Accessor
11 CascadeActions
12 ProxyMethods
13 Base
14/);
b8e1e21f 15
75d07914 16=head1 NAME
34d52be2 17
18DBIx::Class::Relationship - Inter-table relationships
19
20=head1 SYNOPSIS
21
75d07914 22 MyDB::Schema::Actor->has_many('actorroles' => 'MyDB::Schema::ActorRole',
d2113a68 23 'actor');
75d07914 24 MyDB::Schema::Role->has_many('actorroles' => 'MyDB::Schema::ActorRole',
d2113a68 25 'role');
26 MyDB::Schema::ActorRole->belongs_to('role' => 'MyDB::Schema::Role');
27 MyDB::Schema::ActorRole->belongs_to('actor' => 'MyDB::Schema::Actor');
28
29 MyDB::Schema::Role->many_to_many('actors' => 'actorroles', 'actor');
30 MyDB::Schema::Actor->many_to_many('roles' => 'actorroles', 'role');
31
32 $schema->resultset('Actor')->roles();
33 $schema->resultset('Role')->search_related('actors', { Name => 'Fred' });
34 $schema->resultset('ActorRole')->add_to_role({ Name => 'Sherlock Holmes'});
35
36See L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook> for more.
37
34d52be2 38=head1 DESCRIPTION
39
bc1171c3 40This class provides methods to set up relationships between the tables
41in your database model. Relationships are the most useful and powerful
42technique that L<DBIx::Class> provides. To create efficient database queries,
43create relationships between any and all tables that have something in
44common, for example if you have a table Authors:
45
46 ID | Name | Age
47 ------------------
48 1 | Fred | 30
49 2 | Joe | 32
50
51and a table Books:
52
53 ID | Author | Name
54 --------------------
55 1 | 1 | Rulers of the universe
56 2 | 1 | Rulers of the galaxy
57
58Then without relationships, the method of getting all books by Fred goes like
59this:
60
61 my $fred = $schema->resultset('Author')->find({ Name => 'Fred' });
62 my $fredsbooks = $schema->resultset('Book')->search({ Author => $fred->ID });
63With a has_many relationship called "books" on Author (see below for details),
64we can do this instead:
65
66 my $fredsbooks = $schema->resultset('Author')->find({ Name => 'Fred' })->books;
67
75d07914 68Each relationship sets up an accessor method on the
bc1171c3 69L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Glossary/"Row"> objects that represent the items
70of your table. From L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Glossary/"ResultSet"> objects,
75d07914 71the relationships can be searched using the "search_related" method.
bc1171c3 72In list context, each returns a list of Row objects for the related class,
73in scalar context, a new ResultSet representing the joined tables is
74returned. Thus, the calls can be chained to produce complex queries.
75Since the database is not actually queried until you attempt to retrieve
76the data for an actual item, no time is wasted producing them.
77
bc0c9800 78 my $cheapfredbooks = $schema->resultset('Author')->find({
79 Name => 'Fred',
80 })->books->search_related('prices', {
81 Price => { '<=' => '5.00' },
82 });
bc1171c3 83
84will produce a query something like:
85
75d07914 86 SELECT * FROM Author me
bc1171c3 87 LEFT JOIN Books books ON books.author = me.id
88 LEFT JOIN Prices prices ON prices.book = books.id
89 WHERE prices.Price <= 5.00
90
91all without needing multiple fetches.
34d52be2 92
bfab575a 93Only the helper methods for setting up standard relationship types
d2113a68 94are documented here. For the basic, lower-level methods, and a description
95of all the useful *_related methods that you get for free, see
bfab575a 96L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base>.
503536d5 97
34d52be2 98=head1 METHODS
99
bfab575a 100All helper methods take the following arguments:
503536d5 101
8091aa91 102 __PACKAGE__>$method_name('relname', 'Foreign::Class', $cond, $attrs);
bfab575a 103
104Both C<$cond> and C<$attrs> are optional. Pass C<undef> for C<$cond> if
105you want to use the default value for it, but still want to set C<$attrs>.
8091aa91 106See L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base> for a list of valid attributes.
503536d5 107
bfab575a 108=head2 belongs_to
503536d5 109
c99393ff 110 # in a Book class (where Author has many Books)
d2113a68 111 My::DBIC::Schema::Book->belongs_to(author => 'My::DBIC::Schema::Author');
c99393ff 112 my $author_obj = $obj->author;
113 $obj->author($new_author_obj);
503536d5 114
75d07914 115Creates a relationship where the calling class stores the foreign class's
8091aa91 116primary key in one (or more) of its columns. If $cond is a column name
117instead of a join condition hash, that is used as the name of the column
118holding the foreign key. If $cond is not given, the relname is used as
119the column name.
bfab575a 120
8091aa91 121NOTE: If you are used to L<Class::DBI> relationships, this is the equivalent
122of C<has_a>.
503536d5 123
bfab575a 124=head2 has_many
503536d5 125
c99393ff 126 # in an Author class (where Author has many Books)
d2113a68 127 My::DBIC::Schema::Author->has_many(books => 'My::DBIC::Schema::Book', 'author');
c99393ff 128 my $booklist = $obj->books;
bc0c9800 129 my $booklist = $obj->books({
130 name => { LIKE => '%macaroni%' },
131 { prefetch => [qw/book/],
132 });
c99393ff 133 my @book_objs = $obj->books;
503536d5 134
c99393ff 135 $obj->add_to_books(\%col_data);
503536d5 136
8091aa91 137Creates a one-to-many relationship, where the corresponding elements of the
138foreign class store the calling class's primary key in one (or more) of its
139columns. You should pass the name of the column in the foreign class as the
140$cond argument, or specify a complete join condition.
141
d2113a68 142As well as the accessor method, a method named C<< add_to_<relname> >>
143will also be added to your Row items, this allows you to insert new
144related items, using the same mechanism as in L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base/"create_related">.
145
8091aa91 146If you delete an object in a class with a C<has_many> relationship, all
147related objects will be deleted as well. However, any database-level
148cascade or restrict will take precedence.
503536d5 149
bfab575a 150=head2 might_have
503536d5 151
75d07914 152 My::DBIC::Schema::Author->might_have(pseudonym =>
d2113a68 153 'My::DBIC::Schema::Pseudonyms');
880a1a0c 154 my $pname = $obj->pseudonym; # to get the Pseudonym object
8091aa91 155
c99393ff 156Creates an optional one-to-one relationship with a class, where the foreign
157class stores our primary key in one of its columns. Defaults to the primary
158key of the foreign class unless $cond specifies a column or join condition.
503536d5 159
c99393ff 160If you update or delete an object in a class with a C<might_have>
161relationship, the related object will be updated or deleted as well.
162Any database-level update or delete constraints will override this behaviour.
503536d5 163
bfab575a 164=head2 has_one
165
d2113a68 166 My::DBIC::Schema::Book->has_one(isbn => 'My::DBIC::Schema::ISBN');
c99393ff 167 my $isbn_obj = $obj->isbn;
bfab575a 168
c99393ff 169Creates a one-to-one relationship with another class. This is just like
170C<might_have>, except the implication is that the other object is always
171present. The only difference between C<has_one> and C<might_have> is that
172C<has_one> uses an (ordinary) inner join, whereas C<might_have> uses a
173left join.
503536d5 174
7411204b 175
87c4e602 176=head2 many_to_many
177
75d07914 178 My::DBIC::Schema::Actor->has_many( actor_roles =>
d2113a68 179 'My::DBIC::Schema::ActorRoles',
180 'actor' );
75d07914 181 My::DBIC::Schema::ActorRoles->belongs_to( role =>
d2113a68 182 'My::DBIC::Schema::Role' );
75d07914 183 My::DBIC::Schema::ActorRoles->belongs_to( actor =>
d2113a68 184 'My::DBIC::Schema::Actor' );
185
186 My::DBIC::Schema::Actor->many_to_many( roles => 'actor_roles',
71d5ed18 187 'role' );
bc0c9800 188
189 ...
190
191 my @role_objs = $actor->roles;
b8eca5ce 192
193Creates an accessor bridging two relationships; not strictly a relationship
194in its own right, although the accessor will return a resultset or collection
195of objects just as a has_many would.
d2113a68 196To use many_to_many, existing relationships from the original table to the link
75d07914 197table, and from the link table to the end table must already exist, these
d2113a68 198relation names are then used in the many_to_many call.
7411204b 199
34d52be2 200=cut
201
b8e1e21f 2021;
34d52be2 203
34d52be2 204=head1 AUTHORS
205
daec44b8 206Matt S. Trout <mst@shadowcatsystems.co.uk>
34d52be2 207
208=head1 LICENSE
209
210You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself.
211
212=cut
213