I have an entity called tournament to which users can register to participate in.
The relationship between the two entities is ManyToMany and need to create a view of Symfony2 in which list all tournaments, with or without registered users so that they can join.
This is my DoctrineQueryBuilder
$em->createQueryBuilder('d')
->select('d, i, u')
->leftJoin('d.item','i')
->leftJoin('d.users','u')
->where('d.active = 1')
->andWhere('d.state = 1')
->orderBy('d.dateStart', 'ASC');
I also need to get the number of users who have joined the tournament.
Preamble
There are various ways to achieve what you want. You can create a sub-query to do the count, however a simpler solution is to let doctrine handle this for you.
The solution described below is based on Doctrine lazy/eager loading capability. When doctrine loads an entity, it will also populate it's associations, either lazily or eagerly (default is lazy).
Solution
Assuming your Tournament entity maps the users association as a ManyToMany relation. You can create a new method which counts your Tournament->users.
ManyToMany associations would populate the entity property (in this cases $users) with an ArrayCollection.
A method called countUsers would do the trick, example implementation below:
...
class Tournament {
...
/**
* #ManyToMany(targetEntity="User")
* #JoinTable(name="tournament_users",
* joinColumns={#JoinColumn(name="user_id", referencedColumnName="id")},
* inverseJoinColumns={#JoinColumn(name="tournament_id", referencedColumnName="id"}
* )
**/
private $users;
...
public function countUsers(){
return $this->users->count();
}
In the view when iterating over the collection of tournaments, simply call the $tournament->countUsers() method to display the count.
References:
ArrayCollection: http://www.doctrine-project.org/api/common/2.1/class-Doctrine.Common.Collections.ArrayCollection.html
Related
I have two separate entities that I want to link by a one-to-many relationship. But I want this relationship to be ordered, meaning every time I call on the first entity, the elements of the second entity come in a pre-ordered way. I cannot use 'order by' calls because this order has nothing to do with the fields of the second entity. I thought about having one field of the first entity be an array of entities, but I'm not sure how to accomplish that either..
EDIT
So far I have something like this:
/**
* #ORM\OneToMany(targetEntity="FusionDesign\BlogBundle\Entity\Element", mappedBy="page")
*/
private $elements;
and
/**
* #ORM\ManyToOne(targetEntity="FusionDesign\BlogBundle\Entity\Page", inversedBy="elements")
* #ORM\JoinColumn(name="page_id", referencedColumnName="id")
*/
private $page;
I'm aware that I can put "ORDER BY whatever ASC" somewhere in there but that orders according to a column in Element, and that's not what I need, because Element entities and Page entities would never be persisted at the same time, nor by the same process. What I want to do is constructing a basic CMS where the user could generate new pages. First choose the kind of elements a page could potentially have (like header image, banner, title, and so on) and persist Element entities with fields describing the html, routing and controller content according to those choices. Then, when a new page is created, give the user the choice to order those potential elements at will, and bind Element entities following an order that reflects the layout desired.
I thought about having something like this
/**
* #var array
*
* #ORM\Column(name="structure", type="array")
*/
private $structure;
Where the array stores Element entities but I have no idea how to do that.
You just need to define the orderBy attribute in doctrine's mapping configuration for the relation.
YAML Mapping Example:
'Example\Entity\Article':
# [..]
oneToMany:
images:
targetEntity: 'Example\Entity\Article\Image\ArticleImage'
mappedBy: 'article'
orderBy: # <--- here
position: 'ASC'
My issue is, I'm having trouble grasping DiscriminatorColumn and DiscriminatorMap in Doctrine's Class Inheritance.
I have a products entity that is considered the parent class / table.
There are several child entities that inherit the product entity. (models, parts, and options)
I feel like I should be able to use the primary key to link both tables... But how do I do that with DiscriminatorColumn?
Here is the general idea of what I want to happen...
Fetch all model objects from database while inheriting product parent entity
SELECT object
FROM parts_object parts
LEFT JOIN products_object po
ON parts.product_fk = po.product_id
Or... Fetch all part objects from database while inheriting product parent entity
SELECT object
FROM parts_object parts
LEFT JOIN products_object po
ON parts.product_fk = po.product_id
Ideally I want this done using Doctrine instead of some custom SQL.
Do I need to setup a "type" column for the parent table so each row defines whether it's a part, model, or option?
Doctrine inheritance docs
Okay, I'll try to explain this as simple as possible.
Let's start with DiscriminatorColumn
Discriminator column is basically, as it says, a column in your database. Its used to store, a key, if you like which helps to identify what kind of object you're currently querying, based on your DiscriminatorMap configuration.
DiscriminatorMap is the way you map each of those keys to an entity. You said you have the following
Product [parent]
Model [child of parent]
Part [child of parent]
Option [child of parent]
Then, your discriminator map should look something like this, for example:
#DiscriminatorMap({
"model" = "AppBundle\Entity\Model",
"Part" = "AppBundle\Entity\Part",
"Option" = "AppBundle\Entity\Option"
})
Always pay attention to your last definition in your mapping. The last line must end without a comma!
As of InheritanceType I would suggest you to use #InheritanceType("JOINED") because this will let you have single table for each of your child classes.
Every child class must extend your Product entity class, which is obviously the parent. Each child class must not define $id property, because of the inheritance mapping.
Then querying for records by specific type comes with the following query:
"SELECT product FROM AppBundle\Entity\Product product WHERE product INSTANCE OF AppBundle\Entity\Part"
The query will search only for records mapped to this entity only.
If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask.
Edit as of new comment
-----------------------
A little bit more explanation. You do not need to create any extra property/column in your entity mappings. The moment you add this annotation #DiscriminatorColumn(name="discr", type="string") doctrine will create that column automatically for you. The column from this example would be named discr with type of VARCHAR.
I still don't understand what is used to join the tables. How does doctrine know to link the ids between the product and model
About this part. If you use #InheritanceType("JOINED") this would mean that your GeneratedValue ID would be set in your main entity - Product. Then each of the child entities that extend Product would automatically get the same ID, which is why you don't need to specify $id property in your child entities.
Lastly, how can you check which entity type you're currently viewing for example. Consider the following scenario, each of your child entities extends Product and we will perform a dummy search for a record:
$product = $entityManager->find('AppBundle:Product', 1); // example
Now, if you actually go and do a var_dump($product) you will notice something interesting. The object would be an instance of either Model,Part or Option because each of these entities are defined in your discriminator map and Doctrine automatically maps your records based on that.
Later, this can come handy in situations like this:
if( $product instanceof \AppBundle\Entity\Part ) {
// do something only if that record belongs to part.
}
If you want to use DiscriminatorMap for Doctrine, so you should use Doctrine, but not SQL.
Basic setup is:
/**
* #ORM\Table(name="product")
* #ORM\Entity(repositoryClass="MyApp\ProductBundle\Repository\ProductRepository")
* #ORM\InheritanceType("SINGLE_TABLE")
* #ORM\DiscriminatorColumn(name="productType", type="string")
* #ORM\DiscriminatorMap({
* "Product" = "Product",
* "Model" = "Model",
* "Part" = "Part",
* "Option" = "Option",
* })
*/
class Product
{
...
}
MyApp\ProductBundle\Entity\Model
/**
* #ORM\Entity(repositoryClass="MyApp\ProductBundle\Repository\ModelRepository")
*/
class Model extends Product
{
}
MyApp\ProductBundle\Entity\Part
/**
* #ORM\Entity(repositoryClass="MyApp\ProductBundle\Repository\PartRepository")
*/
class Part extends Product
{
}
MyApp\ProductBundle\Entity\Option
/**
* #ORM\Entity(repositoryClass="MyApp\ProductBundle\Repository\OptionRepository")
*/
class Option extends Product
{
}
Then if you need to get all products at controller
$em = $this->getDoctrine()->getManager();
$repo = $em->getRepository("MyAppProductBundle:Product");
$products = $repo->findAll();
Then if you need select all models, just setup proper repository
$repo = $em->getRepository("MyAppProductBundle:Model");
$models = $repo->findAll();
Im using the Doctrine Query Builder, and have a very specific requirement that came through.
I am using the ManyToMany field in my entity, related to User entity association (Array of User account entities).
/**
* #var ArrayCollection
*
* #ORM\ManyToMany(targetEntity="User", cascade={"persist"})
* #ORM\JoinTable(name="post_user_list")
*/
protected $userList;
Amongst the requirements of displaying "public posts" requires that the Entity have a published boolean set to true, a published date less than the current date, and two users associated with entity.
In my query builder, I have setup this:
$qb = $this->getEntityManager()->createQueryBuilder();
$qb->select($select)->from($this->getEntityName(), 'p');
$criteria = $qb->expr()->andX();
$criteria->add($qb->expr()->eq('p.editor_published', 1))
->add($qb->expr()->lte('p.datePublished', ':now'));
and that only handles the first two requirements, now I need a criteria entry for counting the amount of user entities in userList, and the where clause specifically for greater than or equal to two users.
Not exactly sure where to proceed..
Try this. The query uses HAVING to only display entities that are associated with 2 or more users.
$qb->select($select)
->from($this->getEntityName(), 'p')
->innerJoin('p.userList','u')
->where('p.editor_published = 1')
->andWhere('p.datePublished <= :now')
->groupBy($select) //not sure what's in $select may need to change this
->having('count(u.id) > 1'); //assuming user has an id column otherwise change it
->setParameter('now',new \DateTime());
When i am using a Many-To-Many relationship in Symfony2 using Doctrine ORM i get the problem that my many-to-many relationship is not resolved.
Example:
Class A:
/**
* #ORM\ManyToMany(targetEntity="StoreItem", mappedBy="itemOptions")
*/
protected $storeItems;
Class B:
/**
* #ORM\ManyToMany(targetEntity="StoreItemOption", inversedBy="storeItems")
* #ORM\JoinTable(name="store_item_itemoptions")
*/
protected $itemOptions;
now i store the object in a session, note that i did not called the many to many relationship yet by using
->getItemOptions()
When i get my session object now and do ->getItemOptions() then it is empty.
Anybody has an idea what is causing this?
(PS: I found a hacky solution by saying that when i add an item to my cart i do a empty foreach that calls the method ->getItemOptions())
This is called 'lazy loading', and is a doctrine feature designed to reduce memory overhead.
You can set loading to 'eager' or explicitly add a select for the other field in your DQL to avoid lazy loading: e.g.:
$objectsA=$em->createQueryBuilder('\Class\A', 'a')
->join('a.b', 'b')
->addSelect('b')
->getQuery()
->getResult();
To simplify, two entities are defined: User and Comment. User can post many comments and every comment has only one user assigned, thus Comment entity has:
/**
* #var \Frontuser
*
* #ORM\ManyToOne(targetEntity="Frontuser")
* #ORM\JoinColumns({
* #ORM\JoinColumn(name="ownerUserID", referencedColumnName="id")
* })
*/
private $owneruserid;
However, when in action:
$orm = $this->getDoctrine()->getManager();
$repo = $orm->getRepository('CompDBBundle:Comment');
$repo->findBy(array('owneruserid' => $uid);
Error occured, that there's no such field like owneruserid.
How can I fetch all the user's comments then? The same happens to similar relations in my DB - looks likes you cannot run find() with foreign keys as parameters. I believe a function $user->getComments() should be automatically generated/recognised by Doctrine to allow efficient, quick access to related entities.
The example's simple but, what if there are more entities related to my User in the same way? Do I have to declare repositories for each and try to fetch them by it's owneruserid foreign keys?
Using doctrine, when you define a related entity it's type is the entity class (in this case FrontUser). Therefore firstly your related entity variable name is misleading. It should be e.g.
private $ownerUser;
Then, in order to do a findBy on a related entity field you must supply an entity instance e.g.
$orm = $this->getDoctrine()->getManager();
$userRepo = $orm->getRepository('CompDBBundle:FrontUser');
$user = $userRepo->findById($uid);
$commentRepo = $orm->getRepository('CompDBBundle:Comment');
$userComments = $commentRepo->findByOwnerUser($user);
If you don't have or want to retrieve the user entity you could use a DQL query with the 'uid' as a parameter instead.