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crane-query-builder

React Native SQLite query builder


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Maintainers
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Crane: React Native SQLite Query Builder

Crane

Code Climate License

Crane is a query builder for React Native extracted from Laravel's illuminate/database. This library supports both react-native-sqlite-storage and expo sqlite.

Table of Contents

Demo

For a demo, click here.

Installation

Crane requires SQLite driver in order to work.

If you are using expo, install the expo-sqlite

expo install expo-sqlite

If you are using bare React Native, install the react-native-sqlite-storage. For detail instruction, please refer to the package documentation

yarn add react-native-sqlite-storage

Finally, install crane

yarn add crane-query-builder

Getting Started

For Expo

import React, { useEffect } from 'react';
import { StyleSheet, Text, View } from 'react-native';
import { Asset } from 'expo-asset';
import * as SQLite from 'expo-sqlite';
import * as FileSystem from 'expo-file-system';
import Builder, { DB } from 'crane'; // Import the library


export default function App() {
  useEffect(() => {
    testDB();
  }, []);

  return (
    <View style={styles.container}>
      <Text>Open up App.js to start working on your app!</Text>
    </View>
  );
}

export async function testDB() {
  await initDB();
  await getAlbums();
}

export async function initDB() {
  await testDriver();
  await loadDB();
}

export async function testDriver() {
  const dummy = SQLite.openDatabase('dummy.db');

  try {
    await dummy.transaction(tx => tx.executeSql(''));
  } catch (e) {
    if (this.state.debugEnabled)
      console.log('error while executing SQL in dummy DB');
  }
}

export async function loadDB() {
  let dbFile = await FileSystem.getInfoAsync(`${FileSystem.documentDirectory}SQLite/db.db`);

  if (!dbFile.exists)
    makeDir();

  // Add connection using DB.addConnection
  DB.addConnection({
    type: 'expo',
    driver: SQLite,
    name: 'db.db',
  });
}

export async function makeDir() {
  await FileSystem.downloadAsync(
    Asset.fromModule(require('./assets/db/db.db')).uri,
    `${FileSystem.documentDirectory}SQLite/db.db`
  );
}


export async function getAlbums() {
  // Build your query
  let albums = await Builder()
    .table('albums')
    .where('ArtistId', '>', 200)
    .get();

  console.log(albums);
}

const styles = StyleSheet.create({
  container: {
    flex: 1,
    backgroundColor: '#fff',
    alignItems: 'center',
    justifyContent: 'center',
  },
});

For Bare React Native

// doc coming soon...

Documentation

Retrieving Results

Retrieving All Rows From A Table

You may use the table method begin a query. The table method returns a fluent query builder instance for the given table, allowing you to chain more constraints onto the query and then finally get the results using the get method:

let albums = await Builder()
    .table('albums')
    .get()

Retrieving A Single Row / Column From A Table

If you just need to retrieve a single row from the database table, you may use the first method.

let albums = await Builder()
    .table('albums')
    .where('ArtistId', '>', 200)
    .first()

If you don't even need an entire row, you may extract a single value from a record using the value method. This method will return the value of the column directly:

let employees = await Builder()
    .table('employees')
    .where('Title', 'Sales Support Agent')
    .value('FirstName')

To retrieve a single row by its id column value, use the find method:

let users = await Builder()
    .table('users')
    .find(4)

Retrieving A List Of Column Values

If you would like to retrieve a Collection containing the values of a single column, you may use the pluck method. In this example, we'll retrieve a Collection of role titles:

let employees = await Builder()
    .table('employees')
    .where('Title', 'Sales Support Agent')
    .pluck('FirstName', 'LastName')
Aggregates

The query builder also provides a variety of aggregate methods such as count, max, min, avg, and sum. You may call any of these methods after constructing your query:

let customers = await Builder()
    .table('customers')
    .count()

let invoices = await Builder()
    .table('invoices')
    .max('total')

You may combine these methods with other clauses:

let invoices = await Builder()
    .table('invoices')
    .where('BillingState', 'CA')
    .avg('total')

Determining If Records Exist

Instead of using the count method to determine if any records exist that match your query's constraints, you may use the exists and doesntExist methods:

let customersA = await Builder()
    .table('customers')
    .where('PostalCode', '14700')
    .exists()

let customersB = await Builder()
    .table('customers')
    .where('PostalCode', '14700')
    .doesntExist()

Selects

Specifying A Select Clause

You may not always want to select all columns from a database table. Using the select method, you can specify a custom select clause for the query:

let customers = await Builder()
  .table('customers')
  .select('FirstName', 'Phone as CustomerPhone')
  .get()

The distinct method allows you to force the query to return distinct results:

let customers = await Builder()
  .table('customers')
  .distinct()
  .get()

If you already have a query builder instance and you wish to add a column to its existing select clause, you may use the addSelect method:

let query = Builder()
  .table('customers')
  .select('FirstName')

let customers = await query
  .addSelect('LastName')
  .get()

Raw Expressions

Sometimes you may need to use a raw expression in a query. To create a raw expression, you may use the raw method:

let users = await Builder().table('users')
  .select(Builder().raw('count(*) as user_count, status'))
  .where('status', '<>', 1)
  .groupBy('status')
  .get()

Raw statements will be injected into the query as strings, so you should be extremely careful to not create SQL injection vulnerabilities.

Raw Methods

Instead of using raw, you may also use the following methods to insert a raw expression into various parts of your query.

selectRaw

The selectRaw method can be used in place of addSelect(Builder().raw(...)). This method accepts an optional array of bindings as its second argument:

let orders = await Builder()
  .table('orders')
  .selectRaw('price * ? as price_with_tax', [1.0825])
  .get()

whereRaw / orWhereRaw

The whereRaw and orWhereRaw methods can be used to inject a raw where clause into your query. These methods accept an optional array of bindings as their second argument:

let orders = await Builder()
  .table('orders')
  .whereRaw('price > IF(state = "TX", ?, 100)', [200])
  .get()

havingRaw / orHavingRaw

The havingRaw and orHavingRaw methods may be used to set a raw string as the value of the having clause. These methods accept an optional array of bindings as their second argument:

let orders = await Builder()
  .table('orders')
  .select('department', Builder().raw('SUM(price) as total_sales'))
  .groupBy('department')
  .havingRaw('SUM(price) > ?', [2500])
  .get()

orderByRaw

The orderByRaw method may be used to set a raw string as the value of the order by clause:

let orders = await Builder()
  .table('orders')
  .orderByRaw('updated_at - created_at DESC')
  .get()

Joins

Inner Join Clause

The query builder may also be used to write join statements. To perform a basic "inner join", you may use the join method on a query builder instance. The first argument passed to the join method is the name of the table you need to join to, while the remaining arguments specify the column constraints for the join. You can even join to multiple tables in a single query:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .join('contacts', 'users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')
  .join('orders', 'users.id', '=', 'orders.user_id')
  .select('users.*', 'contacts.phone', 'orders.price')
  .get()

Left Join / Right Join Clause

If you would like to perform a "left join" or "right join" instead of an "inner join", use the leftJoin or rightJoin methods. These methods have the same signature as the join method:

let usersA = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .leftJoin('posts', 'users.id', '=', 'posts.user_id')
  .get()

let usersB = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .rightJoin('posts', 'users.id', '=', 'posts.user_id')
  .get()

Cross Join Clause

To perform a "cross join" use the crossJoin method with the name of the table you wish to cross join to. Cross joins generate a cartesian product between the first table and the joined table:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('sizes')
  .crossJoin('colours')
  .get()

Advanced Join Clauses

You may also specify more advanced join clauses. To get started, pass a Closure as the second argument into the join method. The Closure will receive a JoinClause object which allows you to specify constraints on the join clause:

await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .join('contacts', join => {
    join
      .on('users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')
      .orOn(...)
  })
  .get()

If you would like to use a "where" style clause on your joins, you may use the where and orWhere methods on a join. Instead of comparing two columns, these methods will compare the column against a value:

await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .join('contacts', join => {
      join
        .on('users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')
        .where('contacts.user_id', '>', 5)
  })
  .get()

Subquery Joins

You may use the joinSub, leftJoinSub, and rightJoinSub methods to join a query to a subquery. Each of these methods receive three arguments: the subquery, its table alias, and a Closure that defines the related columns:

await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .join('contacts', join => {
    join
      .on('users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')
      .where('contacts.user_id', '>', 5);
    })
  .get()

Unions

The query builder also provides a quick way to "union" two queries together. For example, you may create an initial query and use the union method to union it with a second query:

let first = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereNull('first_name')

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereNull('last_name')
  .union(first)
  .get()

The unionAll method is also available and has the same method signature as union.

Where Clauses

Simple Where Clauses

You may use the where method on a query builder instance to add where clauses to the query. The most basic call to where requires three arguments. The first argument is the name of the column. The second argument is an operator, which can be any of the database's supported operators. Finally, the third argument is the value to evaluate against the column.

For example, here is a query that verifies the value of the "votes" column is equal to 100:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('votes', '=', 100)
  .get()

For convenience, if you want to verify that a column is equal to a given value, you may pass the value directly as the second argument to the where method:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('votes', 100)
  .get()

You may use a variety of other operators when writing a where clause:

let usersA = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('votes', '>=', 100)
  .get()

let usersB = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('votes', '<>', 100)
  .get()

let usersC = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('name', 'like', 'T%')
  .get()

You may also pass an array of conditions to the where function:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where([
    ['status', '=', '1'],
    ['subscribed', '<>', '1'],
  ])
  .get()

Or Statements

You may chain where constraints together as well as add or clauses to the query. The orWhere method accepts the same arguments as the where method:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('votes', '>', 100)
  .orWhere('name', 'John')
  .get()

Additional Where Clauses

whereBetween / orWhereBetween

The whereBetween method verifies that a column's value is between two values:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereBetween('votes', [1, 100])
  .get()

whereNotBetween / orWhereNotBetween

The whereNotBetween method verifies that a column's value lies outside of two values:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereNotBetween('votes', [1, 100])
  .get()

whereIn / whereNotIn / orWhereIn / orWhereNotIn

The whereIn method verifies that a given column's value is contained within the given array:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereIn('id', [1, 2, 3])
  .get()

The whereNotIn method verifies that the given column's value is not contained in the given array:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereNotIn('id', [1, 2, 3])
  .get()

whereNull / whereNotNull / orWhereNull / orWhereNotNull

The whereNull method verifies that the value of the given column is NULL:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereNull('updated_at')
  .get()

The whereNotNull method verifies that the column's value is not NULL:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereNotNull('updated_at')
  .get()

whereDate / whereMonth / whereDay / whereYear / whereTime

The whereDate method may be used to compare a column's value against a date:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereDate('created_at', '2016-12-31')
  .get()

The whereMonth method may be used to compare a column's value against a specific month of a year:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereMonth('created_at', '12')
  .get()

The whereDay method may be used to compare a column's value against a specific day of a month:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereDay('created_at', '31')
  .get()

The whereYear method may be used to compare a column's value against a specific year:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereYear('created_at', '2016')
  .get()

The whereTime method may be used to compare a column's value against a specific time:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereTime('created_at', '=', '11:20:45')
  .get()

whereColumn / orWhereColumn

The whereColumn method may be used to verify that two columns are equal:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereColumn('first_name', 'last_name')
  .get()

You may also pass a comparison operator to the method:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereColumn('updated_at', '>', 'created_at')
  .get()

The whereColumn method can also be passed an array of multiple conditions. These conditions will be joined using the and operator:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .whereColumn([
    ['first_name', '=', 'last_name'],
    ['updated_at', '>', 'created_at'],
  ])
  .get()
Parameter Grouping

Sometimes you may need to create more advanced where clauses such as "where exists" clauses or nested parameter groupings. The Laravel query builder can handle these as well. To get started, let's look at an example of grouping constraints within parenthesis:

let users = await Builder()
  .table('users')
  .where('name', '=', 'John')
  .where(query => {
    query
      .where('votes', '>', 100)
      .orWhere('title', '=', 'Admin')
  })
  .get()

As you can see, passing a Closure into the where method instructs the query builder to begin a constraint group. The Closure will receive a query builder instance which you can use to set the constraints that should be contained within the parenthesis group. The example above will produce the following SQL:

select * from users where name = 'John' and (votes > 100 or title = 'Admin')

You should always group orWhere calls in order to avoid unexpected behavior when global scopes are applied.

Ordering, Grouping, Limit & Offset

orderBy

The orderBy method allows you to sort the result of the query by a given column. The first argument to the orderBy method should be the column you wish to sort by, while the second argument controls the direction of the sort and may be either asc or desc:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .orderBy('name', 'desc')
  .get()

latest / oldest

The latest and oldest methods allow you to easily order results by date. By default, result will be ordered by the created_at column. Or, you may pass the column name that you wish to sort by:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .latest()
  .first()

inRandomOrder

The inRandomOrder method may be used to sort the query results randomly. For example, you may use this method to fetch a random user:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .inRandomOrder()
  .first()

groupBy / having

The groupBy and having methods may be used to group the query results. The having method's signature is similar to that of the where method:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .groupBy('account_id')
  .having('account_id', '>', 100)
  .get()

You may pass multiple arguments to the groupBy method to group by multiple columns:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .groupBy('first_name', 'status')
  .having('account_id', '>', 100)
  .get()

For more advanced having statements, see the havingRaw method.

skip / take

To limit the number of results returned from the query, or to skip a given number of results in the query, you may use the skip and take methods:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .skip(10)
  .take(5)
  .get()

Alternatively, you may use the limit and offset methods:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('users')
  .offset(10)
  .limit(5)
  .get()

Inserts

The query builder also provides an insert method for inserting records into the database table. The insert method accepts an array of column names and values:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .insert({
    ArtistId: 500,
    Name: 'Euismod Pellentesque'
  })

You may even insert several records into the table with a single call to insert by passing an array of arrays. Each array represents a row to be inserted into the table:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .insert([
    {
      ArtistId: 501,
      Name: 'Venenatis Elit'
    },
    {
      ArtistId: 502,
      Name: 'Justo Pellentesque'
    },
  ])

The insertOrIgnore method will ignore duplicate record errors while inserting records into the database:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .insertOrIgnore([
    {
      ArtistId: 501,
      Name: 'Venenatis Elit'
    },
    {
      ArtistId: 502,
      Name: 'Justo Pellentesque'
    },
  ])

Auto-Incrementing IDs

If the table has an auto-incrementing id, use the insertGetId method to insert a record and then retrieve the ID:

let users = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .insertGetId({
    ArtistId: 503,
    Name: 'Egestas Inceptos'
  })

Updates

In addition to inserting records into the database, the query builder can also update existing records using the update method. The update method, like the insert method, accepts an array of column and value pairs containing the columns to be updated. You may constrain the update query using where clauses:

let artists = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .table('artists')
  .where('ArtistId', 1)
  .update({
    Name: 'John Doe'
  })

Update Or Insert

Sometimes you may want to update an existing record in the database or create it if no matching record exists. In this scenario, the updateOrInsert method may be used. The updateOrInsert method accepts two arguments: an array of conditions by which to find the record, and an array of column and value pairs containing the columns to be updated.

The updateOrInsert method will first attempt to locate a matching database record using the first argument's column and value pairs. If the record exists, it will be updated with the values in the second argument. If the record can not be found, a new record will be inserted with the merged attributes of both arguments:

let artists = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .updateOrInsert(
    {
      ArtistId: 506
    },
    {
      Name: 'Polymer'
    }
  )
Increment & Decrement

The query builder also provides convenient methods for incrementing or decrementing the value of a given column. This is a shortcut, providing a more expressive and terse interface compared to manually writing the update statement.

Both of these methods accept at least one argument: the column to modify. A second argument may optionally be passed to control the amount by which the column should be incremented or decremented:

let artistsA = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .increment('votes')

let artistsB = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .increment('votes', 5)

let artistsC = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .decrement('votes')

let artistsD = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .decrement('votes', 5)

You may also specify additional columns to update during the operation:

let artists = await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .increment('votes', 1, {name: 'John'})

Deletes

The query builder may also be used to delete records from the table via the delete method. You may constrain delete statements by adding where clauses before calling the delete method:

await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .delete()

await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .where('ArtistId', 505)
  .delete()

If you wish to truncate the entire table, which will remove all rows and reset the auto-incrementing ID to zero, you may use the truncate method:

await Builder() 
  .table('artists')
  .truncate()

Contributing

Crane is platform-agnostic, which means it can be used for a web app, and it can be extended for other drivers like PostgreSQL or MySQL by adding Grammar and Connection.

We appreciate feedback and contribution to this repo! Before you get started, please see the following:

Support + Feedback

  • Use Issues for code-level support
  • Use Mail for usage, questions, specific cases

Thank You!

  • Laravel as the primary reference of this library

License

MIT

Keywords

FAQs

Last updated on 01 Feb 2020

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