Below is a function designed to handle a search scenario for a custom class.
I’ve already tripped over the fact that PDO defaults to binding parameters as strings, causing an integer->string conversion even if it’s not appropriate. As you’ll see, I corrected that by manually checking if the type is integer and then forcing the use of int in those cases. Problem is, my solution only works for a ‘start’ value of 0 — anything higher errors out, and I don’t know why. If I manually set the start/count values to their appropriate values ( i. e. instead of :count I use {$count}), everything works fine, so it looks like the binding is still messing up.
How? Or if I’m wrong… what is right?
/*Query is:
SELECT tutor_school.id
FROM tutor_school, tutor_states
WHERE tutor_states.stateName=:state AND tutor_states.id=tutor_school.state
GROUP BY tutor_school.id order by tutor_school.name asc
LIMIT :start, :count*/
$db = Database::get_user_db();
$statement = $db->prepare($query);
foreach ($executeArray as $key => $value)
{
if (getType($value) == 'integer')
{
$statement->bindParam($key, $executeArray[$key], PDO::PARAM_INT);
}
else
{
$statement->bindParam($key, $value);
}
}
var_dump($executeArray);//count and start are still ints
if ($statement->execute())
{
var_dump($executeArray);//start and count are now strings
var_dump($statement->errorInfo());
var_dump($query);
$values = $statement->fetchAll();
$return = array();
foreach ($values as $row)
{
$school = School::schoolWithId($row[0]);
if (!empty($school))
{
$return[] = $school;
}
}
return $return;
}
Metadata (such as the
LIMITarguments) can’t be parametrized. You will have to use (properly sanitized) interpolation instead.