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PDOStatement::closeCursor> <PDOStatement::bindParam
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 10 Feb 2012

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PDOStatement::bindValue

(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PECL pdo >= 1.0.0)

PDOStatement::bindValue Binds a value to a parameter

Opis

bool PDOStatement::bindValue ( mixed $parameter , mixed $value [, int $data_type = PDO::PARAM_STR ] )

Binds a value to a corresponding named or question mark placeholder in the SQL statement that was used to prepare the statement.

Parametry

parameter

Parameter identifier. For a prepared statement using named placeholders, this will be a parameter name of the form :name. For a prepared statement using question mark placeholders, this will be the 1-indexed position of the parameter.

value

The value to bind to the parameter.

data_type

Explicit data type for the parameter using the PDO::PARAM_* constants.

Zwracane wartości

Zwraca TRUE w przypadku powodzenia, FALSE w przypadku błędu.

Przykłady

Przykład #1 Execute a prepared statement with named placeholders

<?php
/* Execute a prepared statement by binding PHP variables */
$calories 150;
$colour 'red';
$sth $dbh->prepare('SELECT name, colour, calories
    FROM fruit
    WHERE calories < :calories AND colour = :colour'
);
$sth->bindValue(':calories'$caloriesPDO::PARAM_INT);
$sth->bindValue(':colour'$colourPDO::PARAM_STR);
$sth->execute();
?>

Przykład #2 Execute a prepared statement with question mark placeholders

<?php
/* Execute a prepared statement by binding PHP variables */
$calories 150;
$colour 'red';
$sth $dbh->prepare('SELECT name, colour, calories
    FROM fruit
    WHERE calories < ? AND colour = ?'
);
$sth->bindValue(1$caloriesPDO::PARAM_INT);
$sth->bindValue(2$colourPDO::PARAM_STR);
$sth->execute();
?>

Zobacz też:



PDOStatement::closeCursor> <PDOStatement::bindParam
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 10 Feb 2012
 
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes PDOStatement::bindValue
contact[at]maximeelomari.com 17-Jul-2011 05:19
This function is useful for bind value on an array. You can specify the type of the value in advance with $typeArray.

<?php
/**
 * @param string $req : the query on which link the values
 * @param array $array : associative array containing the values ​​to bind
 * @param array $typeArray : associative array with the desired value for its corresponding key in $array
 * */
function bindArrayValue($req, $array, $typeArray = false)
{
    if(
is_object($req) && ($req instanceof PDOStatement))
    {
        foreach(
$array as $key => $value)
        {
            if(
$typeArray)
               
$req->bindValue(":$key",$value,$typeArray[$key]);
            else
            {
                if(
is_int($value))
                   
$param = PDO::PARAM_INT;
                elseif(
is_bool($value))
                   
$param = PDO::PARAM_BOOL;
                elseif(
is_null($value))
                   
$param = PDO::PARAM_NULL;
                elseif(
is_string($value))
                   
$param = PDO::PARAM_STR;
                else
                   
$param = FALSE;
                   
                if(
$param)
                   
$req->bindValue(":$key",$value,$param);
            }
        }
    }
}

/**
 * ## EXEMPLE ##
 * $array = array('language' => 'php','lines' => 254, 'publish' => true);
 * $typeArray = array('language' => PDO::PARAM_STR,'lines' => PDO::PARAM_INT,'publish' => PDO::PARAM_BOOL);
 * $req = 'SELECT * FROM code WHERE language = :language AND lines = :lines AND publish = :publish';
 * You can bind $array like that :
 * bindArrayValue($array,$req,$typeArray);
 * The function is more useful when you use limit clause because they need an integer.
 * */
?>
Anonymous 18-Jun-2011 08:40
Note that the third parameter ($data_type) in the majority of cases will not type cast the value into anything else to be used in the query, nor will it throw any sort of error if the type does not match up with the value provided. This parameter essentially has no effect whatsoever except throwing an error if it is set and is not a float, so do not think that it is adding any extra level of security to the queries.

The two exceptions where type casting is performed:

- if you use PDO::PDO_PARAM_INT and provide a boolean, it will be converted to a long
- if you use PDO::PDO_PARAM_BOOL and provide a long, it will be converted to a boolean

<?php

$query
= 'SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE username = :username AND `password` = ENCRYPT( :password, `crypt_password`)';

$sth= $dbh->prepare($query);

// First try passing a random numerical value as the third parameter
var_dump($sth->bindValue(':username','bob', 12345.67)); // bool(true)

// Next try passing a string using the boolean type
var_dump($sth->bindValue(':password','topsecret_pw', PDO::PARAM_BOOL)); // bool(true)

$sth->execute(); // Query is executed successfully
$result = $sth->fetchAll(); // Returns the result of the query

?>
goofiq dot no dot spam at antispam dot wp dot pl 27-Dec-2009 10:43
bindValue with data_type depend parameter name

<?php

$db
= new PDO (...);
$db -> setAttribute (PDO::ATTR_STATEMENT_CLASS, array ('MY_PDOStatement ', array ($db)));

class
MY_PDOStatement extends PDOStatement {

  public function
execute ($input = array ()) {
    foreach (
$input as $param => $value) {
      if (
preg_match ('/_id$/', $param))
       
$this -> bindValue ($param, $value, PDO::PARAM_INT);
      else
       
$this -> bindValue ($param, $value, PDO::PARAM_STR);
    }
    return
parent::execute ();
  }

}

?>
cpd-dev 11-Dec-2009 04:46
Although bindValue() escapes quotes it does not escape "%" and "_", so be careful when using LIKE. A malicious parameter full of %%% can dump your entire database if you don't escape the parameter yourself. PDO does not provide any other escape method to handle it.
nicolas dot baptiste at gmail dot com 04-Sep-2009 08:06
This actually works to bind NULL on an integer field in MySQL :

$stm->bindValue(':param', null, PDO::PARAM_INT);
Lambdaman 30-Apr-2009 05:19
If you want to bind a null value to a database field you must use 'NULL' in quotes (for MySQL):

<?php

$stmt
->bindValue(:fieldName, 'NULL');

// not
$stmt->bindValue(:fieldName, NULL);
// or
$stmt->bindValue(:fieldName, null);

?>

Using PHP's null/NULL as a value doesn't work.
nicemandan 11-Feb-2009 11:54
I've slightly altered the PDOBindArray function above so it can receive data types, which will help against injection attacks.

<?php

private function PDOBindArray(&$poStatement, &$paArray){
    foreach (
$paArray as $k=>$v) {
        @
$poStatement->bindValue($k, $v[0], $v[1]);
    }     
}

// the array structure should now look something like this

$inputArray = array(
   
':email' => array($email, PDO::PARAM_STR),
   
':pass' => array($pass, PDO::PARAM_INT)
);
?>
Anonymous 25-Aug-2008 04:31
PDO lacks methods to check if values can be bound to a parameter, e.g.,

if ($statement->hasParameter(':param'))
{
    $statement->bindValue(':param', $value);
}

ATM you *have to know* which parameters exist in the SQL-statement. Otherwise you get an error. You cannot test for them.
streaky at mybrokenlogic dot com 08-Jan-2008 02:20
What the bindValue() docs fail to explain without reading them _very_ carefully is that bindParam() is passed to PDO byref - whereas bindValue() isn't.

Thus with bindValue() you can do something like $stmt->bindValue(":something", "bind this"); whereas with bindParam() it will fail because you can't pass a string by reference, for example.
joe at dsforge dot net 01-Oct-2007 06:46
note that bindParam() doesn't let you bind a table name into a prepared statement, whereas this can be done with bindValue()...
ts//tpdada//art//pl 15-Dec-2006 06:34
For bind whole array at once

<?php

function PDOBindArray(&$poStatement, &$paArray){
 
  foreach (
$paArray as $k=>$v){

    @
$poStatement->bindValue(':'.$k,$v);

  }
// foreach
 
 
} // function

// example

$stmt = $dbh->prepare("INSERT INTO tExample (id,value) VALUES (:id,:value)");

$taValues = array(
 
'id' => '1',
 
'value' => '2'
); // array

PDOBindArray($stmt,$taValues);

$stmt->execute();

?>
Chris L 26-May-2006 03:43
I'm not sure if this is intentional or not, but you can't use a placeholder more than once. I assumed (wrongly) that bindValue() would replace ALL instances of a given placeholder with a value. For example:

<?php

// $db is a PDO object
$stmt = $db->prepare
('
    insert into
        TableA
    (
        ID,
        Name,
        Foo
    )

    select
        null,
        :Name,
        :Foo

    from
        TableA

    where
        Foo = :Foo
'
);

$stmt->bindValue(':Name', 'john doe');
$stmt->bindValue(':Foo', 'foo');

$stmt->execute();

?>

This apparently won't work - you must have separate :SelectFoo and :WhereFoo. I'm using PHP 5.0.4, MySQL 5.0.14, and PDO version 1.0.2.

 
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