sqlite_create_function

SQLiteDatabase::createFunction

(PHP 5 < 5.4.0, sqlite >= 1.0.0)

sqlite_create_function -- SQLiteDatabase::createFunction Registers a "regular" User Defined Function for use in SQL statements

Description

void sqlite_create_function ( resource $dbhandle , string $function_name , callable $callback [, int $num_args = -1 ] )

Object oriented style (method):

void SQLiteDatabase::createFunction ( string $function_name , callable $callback [, int $num_args = -1 ] )

sqlite_create_function() allows you to register a PHP function with SQLite as an UDF (User Defined Function), so that it can be called from within your SQL statements.

The UDF can be used in any SQL statement that can call functions, such as SELECT and UPDATE statements and also in triggers.

Parameters

dbhandle

The SQLite Database resource; returned from sqlite_open() when used procedurally. This parameter is not required when using the object-oriented method.

function_name

The name of the function used in SQL statements.

callback

Callback function to handle the defined SQL function.

Note: Callback functions should return a type understood by SQLite (i.e. scalar type).

num_args

Hint to the SQLite parser if the callback function accepts a predetermined number of arguments.

Note: Two alternative syntaxes are supported for compatibility with other database extensions (such as MySQL). The preferred form is the first, where the dbhandle parameter is the first parameter to the function.

Return Values

No value is returned.

Examples

Example #1 sqlite_create_function() example

<?php
function md5_and_reverse($string
{
    return 
strrev(md5($string));
}

if (
$dbhandle sqlite_open('mysqlitedb'0666$sqliteerror)) {
    
    
sqlite_create_function($dbhandle'md5rev''md5_and_reverse'1);
    
    
$sql  'SELECT md5rev(filename) FROM files';
    
$rows sqlite_array_query($dbhandle$sql);
} else {
    echo 
'Error opening sqlite db: ' $sqliteerror;
    exit;
}
?>

In this example, we have a function that calculates the md5 sum of a string, and then reverses it. When the SQL statement executes, it returns the value of the filename transformed by our function. The data returned in $rows contains the processed result.

The beauty of this technique is that you do not need to process the result using a foreach loop after you have queried for the data.

PHP registers a special function named php when the database is first opened. The php function can be used to call any PHP function without having to register it first.

Example #2 Example of using the PHP function

<?php
$rows 
sqlite_array_query($dbhandle"SELECT php('md5', filename) from files");
?>

This example will call the md5() on each filename column in the database and return the result into $rows

Note:

For performance reasons, PHP will not automatically encode/decode binary data passed to and from your UDF's. You need to manually encode/decode the parameters and return values if you need to process binary data in this way. Take a look at sqlite_udf_encode_binary() and sqlite_udf_decode_binary() for more details.

Tip

It is not recommended to use UDF's to handle processing of binary data, unless high performance is not a key requirement of your application.

Tip

You can use sqlite_create_function() and sqlite_create_aggregate() to override SQLite native SQL functions.

See Also