value pairs to be inserted. * * This method may only be called once. Calling it a second time will be * ignored. To queue up multiple sets of values to be inserted at once, * use the values() method. * * @param array $fields * An array of fields on which to insert. This array may be indexed or * associative. If indexed, the array is taken to be the list of fields. * If associative, the keys of the array are taken to be the fields and * the values are taken to be corresponding values to insert. If a * $values argument is provided, $fields must be indexed. * @param array $values * (optional) An array of fields to insert into the database. The values * must be specified in the same order as the $fields array. * * @return $this * The called object. */ public function fields(array $fields, array $values = []) { if (empty($this->insertFields)) { if (empty($values)) { if (!is_numeric(key($fields))) { $values = array_values($fields); $fields = array_keys($fields); } } $this->insertFields = $fields; if (!empty($values)) { $this->insertValues[] = $values; } } return $this; } /** * Adds another set of values to the query to be inserted. * * If $values is a numeric-keyed array, it will be assumed to be in the same * order as the original fields() call. If it is associative, it may be * in any order as long as the keys of the array match the names of the * fields. * * @param array $values * An array of values to add to the query. * * @return $this * The called object. */ public function values(array $values) { if (is_numeric(key($values))) { $this->insertValues[] = $values; } elseif ($this->insertFields) { // Reorder the submitted values to match the fields array. foreach ($this->insertFields as $key) { $insert_values[$key] = $values[$key]; } // For consistency, the values array is always numerically indexed. $this->insertValues[] = array_values($insert_values); } return $this; } /** * Specifies fields for which the database defaults should be used. * * If you want to force a given field to use the database-defined default, * not NULL or undefined, use this method to instruct the database to use * default values explicitly. In most cases this will not be necessary * unless you are inserting a row that is all default values, as you cannot * specify no values in an INSERT query. * * Specifying a field both in fields() and in useDefaults() is an error * and will not execute. * * @param array $fields * An array of values for which to use the default values * specified in the table definition. * * @return $this * The called object. */ public function useDefaults(array $fields) { $this->defaultFields = $fields; return $this; } /** * Returns the query placeholders for values that will be inserted. * * @param array $nested_insert_values * A nested array of values to insert. * @param array $default_fields * An array of fields that should be set to their database-defined defaults. * * @return array * An array of insert placeholders. */ protected function getInsertPlaceholderFragment(array $nested_insert_values, array $default_fields) { $max_placeholder = 0; $values = []; if ($nested_insert_values) { foreach ($nested_insert_values as $insert_values) { $placeholders = []; // Default fields aren't really placeholders, but this is the most convenient // way to handle them. $placeholders = array_pad($placeholders, count($default_fields), 'default'); $new_placeholder = $max_placeholder + count($insert_values); for ($i = $max_placeholder; $i < $new_placeholder; ++$i) { $placeholders[] = ':db_insert_placeholder_' . $i; } $max_placeholder = $new_placeholder; $values[] = '(' . implode(', ', $placeholders) . ')'; } } else { // If there are no values, then this is a default-only query. We still need to handle that. $placeholders = array_fill(0, count($default_fields), 'default'); $values[] = '(' . implode(', ', $placeholders) . ')'; } return $values; } /** * {@inheritdoc} */ public function count() { return count($this->insertValues); } }