1Padre::DB::Bookmark(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentationPadre::DB::Bookmark(3)
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NAME

6       Padre::DB::Bookmark - Padre::DB class for the bookmark table
7

SYNOPSIS

9       TO BE COMPLETED
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DESCRIPTION

12       TO BE COMPLETED
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METHODS

15   base
16         # Returns 'Padre::DB'
17         my $namespace = Padre::DB::Bookmark->base;
18
19       Normally you will only need to work directly with a table class, and
20       only with one ORLite package.
21
22       However, if for some reason you need to work with multiple ORLite
23       packages at the same time without hardcoding the root namespace all the
24       time, you can determine the root namespace from an object or table
25       class with the "base" method.
26
27   table
28         # Returns 'bookmark'
29         print Padre::DB::Bookmark->table;
30
31       While you should not need the name of table for any simple operations,
32       from time to time you may need it programatically. If you do need it,
33       you can use the "table" method to get the table name.
34
35   load
36         my $object = Padre::DB::Bookmark->load( $id );
37
38       If your table has single column primary key, a "load" method will be
39       generated in the class. If there is no primary key, the method is not
40       created.
41
42       The "load" method provides a shortcut mechanism for fetching a single
43       object based on the value of the primary key. However it should only be
44       used for cases where your code trusts the record to already exists.
45
46       It returns a "Padre::DB::Bookmark" object, or throws an exception if
47       the object does not exist.
48
49   select
50         # Get all objects in list context
51         my @list = Padre::DB::Bookmark->select;
52
53         # Get a subset of objects in scalar context
54         my $array_ref = Padre::DB::Bookmark->select(
55             'where id > ? order by id',
56             1000,
57         );
58
59       The "select" method executes a typical SQL "SELECT" query on the
60       bookmark table.
61
62       It takes an optional argument of a SQL phrase to be added after the
63       "FROM bookmark" section of the query, followed by variables to be bound
64       to the placeholders in the SQL phrase. Any SQL that is compatible with
65       SQLite can be used in the parameter.
66
67       Returns a list of Padre::DB::Bookmark objects when called in list
68       context, or a reference to an "ARRAY" of Padre::DB::Bookmark objects
69       when called in scalar context.
70
71       Throws an exception on error, typically directly from the DBI layer.
72
73   iterate
74         Padre::DB::Bookmark->iterate( sub {
75             print $_->id . "\n";
76         } );
77
78       The "iterate" method enables the processing of large tables one record
79       at a time without loading having to them all into memory in advance.
80
81       This plays well to the strength of SQLite, allowing it to do the work
82       of loading arbitrarily large stream of records from disk while
83       retaining the full power of Perl when processing the records.
84
85       The last argument to "iterate" must be a subroutine reference that will
86       be called for each element in the list, with the object provided in the
87       topic variable $_.
88
89       This makes the "iterate" code fragment above functionally equivalent to
90       the following, except with an O(1) memory cost instead of O(n).
91
92         foreach ( Padre::DB::Bookmark->select ) {
93             print $_->id . "\n";
94         }
95
96       You can filter the list via SQL in the same way you can with "select".
97
98         Padre::DB::Bookmark->iterate(
99             'order by ?', 'id',
100             sub {
101                 print $_->id . "\n";
102             }
103         );
104
105       You can also use it in raw form from the root namespace for better
106       control.  Using this form also allows for the use of arbitrarily
107       complex queries, including joins. Instead of being objects, rows are
108       provided as "ARRAY" references when used in this form.
109
110         Padre::DB->iterate(
111             'select name from bookmark order by id',
112             sub {
113                 print $_->[0] . "\n";
114             }
115         );
116
117   count
118         # How many objects are in the table
119         my $rows = Padre::DB::Bookmark->count;
120
121         # How many objects
122         my $small = Padre::DB::Bookmark->count(
123             'where id > ?',
124             1000,
125         );
126
127       The "count" method executes a "SELECT COUNT(*)" query on the bookmark
128       table.
129
130       It takes an optional argument of a SQL phrase to be added after the
131       "FROM bookmark" section of the query, followed by variables to be bound
132       to the placeholders in the SQL phrase. Any SQL that is compatible with
133       SQLite can be used in the parameter.
134
135       Returns the number of objects that match the condition.
136
137       Throws an exception on error, typically directly from the DBI layer.
138
139   new
140         TO BE COMPLETED
141
142       The "new" constructor is used to create a new abstract object that is
143       not (yet) written to the database.
144
145       Returns a new Padre::DB::Bookmark object.
146
147   create
148         my $object = Padre::DB::Bookmark->create(
149
150             id => 'value',
151
152             name => 'value',
153
154             file => 'value',
155
156             line => 'value',
157
158         );
159
160       The "create" constructor is a one-step combination of "new" and
161       "insert" that takes the column parameters, creates a new
162       Padre::DB::Bookmark object, inserts the appropriate row into the
163       bookmark table, and then returns the object.
164
165       If the primary key column "id" is not provided to the constructor (or
166       it is false) the object returned will have "id" set to the new unique
167       identifier.
168
169       Returns a new bookmark object, or throws an exception on error,
170       typically from the DBI layer.
171
172   insert
173         $object->insert;
174
175       The "insert" method commits a new object (created with the "new"
176       method) into the database.
177
178       If a the primary key column "id" is not provided to the constructor (or
179       it is false) the object returned will have "id" set to the new unique
180       identifier.
181
182       Returns the object itself as a convenience, or throws an exception on
183       error, typically from the DBI layer.
184
185   delete
186         # Delete a single instantiated object
187         $object->delete;
188
189         # Delete multiple rows from the bookmark table
190         Padre::DB::Bookmark->delete('where id > ?', 1000);
191
192       The "delete" method can be used in a class form and an instance form.
193
194       When used on an existing Padre::DB::Bookmark instance, the "delete"
195       method removes that specific instance from the "bookmark", leaving the
196       object intact for you to deal with post-delete actions as you wish.
197
198       When used as a class method, it takes a compulsory argument of a SQL
199       phrase to be added after the "DELETE FROM bookmark" section of the
200       query, followed by variables to be bound to the placeholders in the SQL
201       phrase. Any SQL that is compatible with SQLite can be used in the
202       parameter.
203
204       Returns true on success or throws an exception on error, or if you
205       attempt to call delete without a SQL condition phrase.
206
207   truncate
208         # Delete all records in the bookmark table
209         Padre::DB::Bookmark->truncate;
210
211       To prevent the common and extremely dangerous error case where deletion
212       is called accidentally without providing a condition, the use of the
213       "delete" method without a specific condition is forbidden.
214
215       Instead, the distinct method "truncate" is provided to delete all
216       records in a table with specific intent.
217
218       Returns true, or throws an exception on error.
219

ACCESSORS

221   id
222         if ( $object->id ) {
223             print "Object has been inserted\n";
224         } else {
225             print "Object has not been inserted\n";
226         }
227
228       Returns true, or throws an exception on error.
229
230       REMAINING ACCESSORS TO BE COMPLETED
231

SQL

233       The bookmark table was originally created with the following SQL
234       command.
235
236         CREATE TABLE bookmark (
237             id INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
238             name VARCHAR(255) UNIQUE NOT NULL,
239             file VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
240             line INTEGER NOT NULL
241         )
242

SUPPORT

244       Padre::DB::Bookmark is part of the Padre::DB API.
245
246       See the documentation for Padre::DB for more information.
247

AUTHOR

249       Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
250
252       Copyright 2008-2011 The Padre development team as listed in Padre.pm.
253
254       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
255       under the same terms as Perl itself.
256
257       The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included
258       with this module.
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262perl v5.30.0                      2019-07-26            Padre::DB::Bookmark(3)
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