pg_convert

(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

pg_convert Conviertir valores de un array asociativo en valores adecuados para sentencias SQL

Descripción

pg_convert(
    resource $connection,
    string $table_name,
    array $assoc_array,
    int $options = 0
): array

pg_convert() evalua y convierte los valores de un assoc_array en valores adecuados para su uso en una sentencia SQL. La condición previa para la función pg_convert() es la existencia de una tabla con nombre igual al parámetro table_name que tiene por lo menos tantas columnas como elementos tiene el assoc_array. Los nombres de campos en table_name deben coincidir con los índices de assoc_array y los tipos de datos correspondientes deben ser compatibles. Devuelve un array con los valores convertidos en caso de éxito, false de lo contrario.

Nota:

Los valores booleanos son aceptados y se convierten a booleanos de PostgreSQL. También se admiten representaciones de string de valores booleanos. null se convierte al NULL de PostgreSQL.

Parámetros

connection

Recurso de conexión de base de datos PostgreSQL.

table_name

Nombre de la tabla contra la que convertir los tipos.

assoc_array

Los datos que desea convertir.

options

Cualquier número de PGSQL_CONV_IGNORE_DEFAULT, PGSQL_CONV_FORCE_NULL ó PGSQL_CONV_IGNORE_NOT_NULL, ó una combinación de estos.

Valores devueltos

Un array de valores convertidos, o false en caso de error.

Ejemplos

Ejemplo #1 Ejemplo de pg_convert()

<?php
$dbconn
= pg_connect('dbname=foo');

$tmp = array(
'author' => 'Joe Thackery',
'year' => 2005,
'title' => 'My Life, by Joe Thackery'
);

$vals = pg_convert($dbconn, 'authors', $tmp);
?>

Ver también

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User Contributed Notes 5 notes

up
2
Anonymous
20 years ago
The only options that I see are:

PGSQL_CONV_IGNORE_DEFAULT - Do not use DEAFULT value by removing field from returned array
PGSQL_CONV_FORCE_NULL - Convert to NULL if string is null string
PGSQL_CONV_IGNORE_NOT_NULL - Ignore NOT NULL constraints

These are constants, so don't quote them or anything.
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0
gorhas at gmail dot com
10 years ago
There is a problem when using interval.
If in the array
"time_pause" => '00:30:00'
and time_pause is an interval
the insert fails
pg_insert(): '00:30:00' does not match with '^(@?[ \t]+)?((([-+]?[ \t]+)?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]*)?[ ...
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0
dharana at dharana dot net
21 years ago
I've found "options" possible values:

PG_CONV_CHECK - check only
PG_CONV_STRICT - raise warning for non fatal error
PG_CONV_QUOTE - add quote around values for vchar, text datetime.
PG_CONV_SLASH - add slashes if it needed.
PG_CONV_NULLCHK - check values are defined for NOT NULL fields.
PG_CONV_NO_DEFAULT - ignore default value even if value is empty string.
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-1
VLroyrenn
6 years ago
Another thing that's not well documented is that (as of PHP 7.0/7.1) pg_convert doesn't like non-scalar types and will fail (but not throw just emit an E_WARNING and return false) if you pass it anything other than a string or a number, including an array or something like a DateTime. If you want to insert those types, you actually have to convert those yourself.

Also, somewhat surprisingly, $table_name is not compatible with the output of pg_​escape_​identifier, or seemingly any other kind of escaping.
up
-1
Hayley Watson
7 years ago
This will only apply the appropriate escaping and such appropriate for embedding the PHP value into an SQL statement.

It does (by default) check for nulls when the column is marked NOT NULL, and it will complain about trying to convert strings for an integer column (floats will be truncated).

Beyond the barest checking of syntax, however, it does NOT verify that the given value is a legitimate value for the column type.

<?php
// Assuming smallints.smallintis a smallint (-32768..32767) type column
foreach([-1234,
1234,
0,
32767,
-
32768,
32768, // bogus value for smallint type
45.8, // gets truncated to 45
400000, // bogus value for smallint type
] as $smallint)
{
$tmp = ['smallint' => $smallint];
$vals = pg_convert($dbconn, 'smallints', ['smallint' => $smallint]);
echo
$vals['"smallint"'],"\n"; // Notice the column name is also made SQL-safe
}

// Assuming uuids.uuid is a UUID type column
foreach(['a0eebc99-9c0b-4ef8-bb6d-6bb9bd380a11',
'A0EEBC99-9C0B-4EF8-BB6D-6BB9BD380A11',
'a0eebc999c0b4ef8bb6d6bb9bd380a11',
'{a0eebc99-9c0b-4ef8-bb6d-6bb9bd380a11}',
'Invalid Not-a-UUID',
'{a0eebc99-9c0b4ef8-bb6d6bb9-bd380a11}',
'a0ee-bc99-9c0b-4ef8-bb6d-6bb9-bd38-0a11',
] as
$uuid)
{
$tmp = ['uuid' => $uuid];
$vals = pg_convert($dbconn, 'uuids', ['uuid' => $uuid]);
echo
$vals['"uuid"'],"\n";
}

?>

All of the above data values will be "converted" - even the invalid ones - without complaint.
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