NAME¶
Alzabo::QuickRef - A quick reference to methods in the Alzabo classes
GENERAL¶
This reference is intended to provide a quick reference to
some of the
more commonly used methods that Alzabo provides. In addition, this reference
can give you an idea of what classes contain certain
types of methods,
so you have an idea of where to look in order to figure out how to achieve a
certain task.
Alzabo, Alzabo::Create, and Alzabo::Runtime
These modules are mostly used just to load other modules. The
"Alzabo::Runtime" module can be used to preload schemas at compile
time by doing:
use Alzabo::Runtime qw( schema1 schema2 schema3 );
Alzabo::MethodMaker
This module can be used to generate many useful convenience methods. This is
done by auto-generating methods in new packages and re-blessing some of the
schema objects into these packages. To have it generate all the possible
methods for a schema you would do:
use Alzabo::MethodMaker ( schema => 'some_schema',
# Root for new packages
class_root => 'My::Data',
# Make all possible methods
all => 1 );
This will make convenience methods for such things as getting table and column
objects, following various types of foreign keys, and getting data from row
objects.
METHODS¶
Retrieving data
Alzabo::Runtime::Schema
This object allows you to connect to the database. It contains several data
retrieval methods including "join".
- * load_from_file
- Load an existing schema object from disk. Returns a new
schema object.
- * set_user ($user)
- Set the username to be used when connecting to the
database.
- * set_password ($password)
- Set the password to be used when connecting to the
database.
- * set_host ($host)
- Set the host to be used when connecting to the
database.
- * connect (%params)
- Connect to the RDBMS. This will use the previously set
username/password/host, though these can be overridden by the %params
given to the call.
Important: This method must be called before any data retrieval is
attempted.
- * join
- Fetch rows from one or more tables based on a table join.
Returns either a "Alzabo::Runtime::RowCursor" or
"Alzabo::Runtime::JoinCursor" object.
- * function/select
- Allows you to execute arbitrary column aggregate SQL
functions such as "AVG" or "MAX" with a multi-table
join.
- * table ($name)
- Returns an "Alzabo::Runtime::Table" object. This
is important because most of the row fetching operations are table object
methods.
Alzabo::Runtime::Table
Objects in this class have methods allowing you to insert new rows as well as
retrieving exist data in the form of "Alzabo::Runtime::Row" or
"Alzabo::Runtime::RowCursor" objects.
All methods that return a single row return an "Alzabo::Runtime::Row"
object.
All methods that return multiple rows return an
"Alzabo::Runtime::RowCursor" object.
All methods that return rows can be given the "no_cache" parameter,
which ensures that the row(s) returned will not be cached. Rows obtained in
this manner should not be updated or deleted, as this will play havoc with the
caching system. See the "Alzabo::Runtime::Row" documentation for
more details.
All methods that return multiple rows in the form of a cursor object can take an
"order_by" parameter. See the "Alzabo::Runtime::Table"
documentation for more details.
- * insert
- Insert a new row and return it.
- * row_by_pk
- Returns the row identified by the primary key give.
- * rows_where
- Retrieves a set of rows based on a where clause. Please see
the method documentation for details on how where clauses are
constructed.
- * all_rows
- Retrieves all the rows in the table.
- * function/select
- Allows you to execute arbitrary column aggregate SQL
functions such as "AVG" or "MAX".
- * potential_row
- Make a new "Alzabo::Runtime::Row" in the
"potential" state.
Alzabo::Runtime::Row
Objects in this class represent a single row of data. You can retrieve the
actual column values from it, update it, or delete it.
- * select (@list_of_column_names)
- Given a list of column names, this method returns the
values for those columns.
- * update (%hash_of_columns_and_values)
- Given a hash of columns and values, this method will update
the database and the object to match those values.
- * delete
- Deletes the row from the database. Further attempts to
retrieve data from this row will throw an exception.
- * rows_by_foreign_key
- Given a foreign key object from the row's table to another
table, returns either an "Alzabo::Runtime::Row" object or an
"Alzabo::Runtime::RowCursor" object for the row(s) in the table
to which the relationship exists, based on the value of the relevant
column(s) in the current row.
This method can also take a "no_cache" and/or "order_by"
parameter.
Alzabo::Runtime::RowCursor
Objects in this class are used to return multiple rows as a cursor, rather than
as a list. This is much more efficient, at the expense of a few extra lines in
your code.
- * next
- Returns the next "Alzabo::Runtime::Row" object,
or undef if there are no more.
- * all_rows
- Returns a list of all the remaining
"Alzabo::Runtime::Row" objects, or an empty list if there are no
more.
Creating/removing a schema
Alzabo::Create::Schema
This object represents a schema, and contains one or more table objects. It is
only used when creating or altering a schema, as opposed to when fetching
data. Data manipulation is done via the "Alzabo::Runtime::*"
classes.
- * reverse_engineer
- Connect to a database and reverse engineer a schema.
Returns a new schema object.
- * load_from_file
- Load an existing schema object from disk. Returns a new
schema object.
- * create
- If the schema has not yet been instantiated in an RDBMS,
this method will instantiate the schema. If it has been previously
instantiated, it will bring the schema in the RDBMS into sync with its
object representation (altering tables/columns, etc.) Where possible,
exist data will be preserved.
- * make_sql
- Returns an array, each element of which is a SQL statement.
The SQL is either the SQL to create the schema from scratch or the SQL
needed to update the RDBMS to match the current object. See the
"create" method for more details.
- * drop
- Drop the database from the RDBMS where it was created. Does
not remove the schema object itself from disk.
- * delete
- Delete the schema object files from disk. Does not drop the
database from the RDBMS.
AUTHOR¶
Dave Rolsky, <autarch@urth.org>