(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL pdo_sqlite >= 1.0.0)
PDO::sqliteCreateAggregate — Registers an aggregating User Defined Function for use in SQL statements
$function_name
, callable $step_func
, callable $finalize_func
, int $num_args
= ?
) : bool此函数是实验性的。此函数的表象,包括名称及其相关文档都可能在未来的 PHP 发布版本中未通知就被修改。使用本函数风险自担。
This method is similar to PDO::sqliteCreateFunction except that it registers functions that can be used to calculate a result aggregated across all the rows of a query.
The key difference between this method and PDO::sqliteCreateFunction is that two functions are required to manage the aggregate.
function_name
The name of the function used in SQL statements.
step_func
Callback function called for each row of the result set. Your PHP function should accumulate the result and store it in the aggregation context.
This function need to be defined as:
context
null
for the first row; on subsequent rows it will have the value
that was previously returned from the step function; you should use
this to maintain the aggregate state.
rownumber
The current row number.
value
The first argument passed to the aggregate.
values
Further arguments passed to the aggregate.
context
argument in the next call of the step or
finalize functions.
finalize_func
Callback function to aggregate the "stepped" data from each row. Once all the rows have been processed, this function will be called and it should then take the data from the aggregation context and return the result. This callback function should return a type understood by SQLite (i.e. scalar type).
This function need to be defined as:
context
Holds the return value from the very last call to the step function.
rowcount
Holds the number of rows over which the aggregate was performed.
num_args
Hint to the SQLite parser if the callback function accepts a predetermined number of arguments.
成功时返回 true
, 或者在失败时返回 false
。
Example #1 max_length aggregation function example
<?php
$data = array(
'one',
'two',
'three',
'four',
'five',
'six',
'seven',
'eight',
'nine',
'ten',
);
$db = new PDO('sqlite::memory:');
$db->exec("CREATE TABLE strings(a)");
$insert = $db->prepare('INSERT INTO strings VALUES (?)');
foreach ($data as $str) {
$insert->execute(array($str));
}
$insert = null;
function max_len_step($context, $rownumber, $string)
{
if (strlen($string) > $context) {
$context = strlen($string);
}
return $context;
}
function max_len_finalize($context, $rowcount)
{
return $context === null ? 0 : $context;
}
$db->sqliteCreateAggregate('max_len', 'max_len_step', 'max_len_finalize');
var_dump($db->query('SELECT max_len(a) from strings')->fetchAll());
?>
In this example, we are creating an aggregating function that will
calculate the length of the longest string in one of the columns of the
table. For each row, the max_len_step
function is
called and passed a $context
parameter. The context
parameter is just like any other PHP variable and be set to hold an array
or even an object value. In this example, we are simply using it to hold
the maximum length we have seen so far; if the
$string
has a length longer than the current
maximum, we update the context to hold this new maximum length.
After all of the rows have been processed, SQLite calls the
max_len_finalize
function to determine the aggregate
result. Here, we could perform some kind of calculation based on the
data found in the $context
. In our simple example
though, we have been calculating the result as the query progressed, so we
simply need to return the context value.
It is NOT recommended for you to store a copy of the values in the context and then process them at the end, as you would cause SQLite to use a lot of memory to process the query - just think of how much memory you would need if a million rows were stored in memory, each containing a string 32 bytes in length.
You can use PDO::sqliteCreateFunction and PDO::sqliteCreateAggregate to override SQLite native SQL functions.