Introduction
Laravel's database query builder provides a convenient, fluent interface to creating and running database queries. It can be used to perform most database operations in your application and works perfectly with all of Laravel's supported database systems.
The Laravel query builder uses PDO parameter binding to protect your application against SQL injection attacks. There is no need to clean or sanitize strings passed to the query builder as query bindings.
Warning!
PDO does not support binding column names. Therefore, you should never allow user input to dictate the column names referenced by your queries, including "order by" columns.
Running Database Queries
Retrieving All Rows From a Table
You may use the table
method provided by the
DB
facade to 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 retrieve the
results of the query using the get
method:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
use Illuminate\View\View;
class UserController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show a list of all of the application's users.
*/
public function index(): View
{
$users = DB::table('users')->get();
return view('user.index', ['users' => $users]);
}
}
The get
method returns an
Illuminate\Support\Collection
instance
containing the results of the query where each result is
an instance of the PHP stdClass
object. You
may access each column's value by accessing the column
as a property of the object:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
$users = DB::table('users')->get();
foreach ($users as $user) {
echo $user->name;
}
Note:
Laravel collections provide a variety of extremely powerful methods for mapping and reducing data. For more information on Laravel collections, check out the collection documentation.
Retrieving a Single Row / Column From a Table
If you just need to retrieve a single row from a database
table, you may use the DB
facade's
first
method. This method will return a
single stdClass
object:
$user = DB::table('users')->where('name', 'John')->first();
return $user->email;
If you don't 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:
$email = DB::table('users')->where('name', 'John')->value('email');
To retrieve a single row by its id
column
value, use the find
method:
$user = DB::table('users')->find(3);
Retrieving a List of Column Values
If you would like to retrieve an
Illuminate\Support\Collection
instance
containing the values of a single column, you may use
the pluck
method. In this example, we'll
retrieve a collection of user titles:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
$titles = DB::table('users')->pluck('title');
foreach ($titles as $title) {
echo $title;
}
You may specify the column that the resulting collection
should use as its keys by providing a second argument to
the pluck
method:
$titles = DB::table('users')->pluck('title', 'name');
foreach ($titles as $name => $title) {
echo $title;
}
Chunking Results
If you need to work with thousands of database records,
consider using the chunk
method provided by
the DB
facade. This method retrieves a
small chunk of results at a time and feeds each chunk
into a closure for processing. For example, let's
retrieve the entire users
table in chunks
of 100 records at a time:
use Illuminate\Support\Collection;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
DB::table('users')->orderBy('id')->chunk(100, function (Collection $users) {
foreach ($users as $user) {
// ...
}
});
You may stop further chunks from being processed by
returning false
from the closure:
DB::table('users')->orderBy('id')->chunk(100, function (Collection $users) {
// Process the records...
return false;
});
If you are updating database records while chunking
results, your chunk results could change in unexpected
ways. If you plan to update the retrieved records while
chunking, it is always best to use the
chunkById
method instead. This method will
automatically paginate the results based on the record's
primary key:
DB::table('users')->where('active', false)
->chunkById(100, function (Collection $users) {
foreach ($users as $user) {
DB::table('users')
->where('id', $user->id)
->update(['active' => true]);
}
});
Warning!
When updating or deleting records inside the chunk callback, any changes to the primary key or foreign keys could affect the chunk query. This could potentially result in records not being included in the chunked results.
Streaming Results Lazily
The lazy
method works similarly to the chunk
method in the sense that it executes the query
in chunks. However, instead of passing each chunk into a
callback, the lazy()
method returns a LazyCollection
,
which lets you interact with the results as a single
stream:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
DB::table('users')->orderBy('id')->lazy()->each(function (object $user) {
// ...
});
Once again, if you plan to update the retrieved records
while iterating over them, it is best to use the
lazyById
or lazyByIdDesc
methods instead. These methods will automatically
paginate the results based on the record's primary
key:
DB::table('users')->where('active', false)
->lazyById()->each(function (object $user) {
DB::table('users')
->where('id', $user->id)
->update(['active' => true]);
});
Warning!
When updating or deleting records while iterating over them, any changes to the primary key or foreign keys could affect the chunk query. This could potentially result in records not being included in the results.
Aggregates
The query builder also provides a variety of methods for
retrieving aggregate values like count
,
max
, min
, avg
,
and sum
. You may call any of these methods
after constructing your query:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
$users = DB::table('users')->count();
$price = DB::table('orders')->max('price');
Of course, you may combine these methods with other clauses to fine-tune how your aggregate value is calculated:
$price = DB::table('orders')
->where('finalized', 1)
->avg('price');
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:
if (DB::table('orders')->where('finalized', 1)->exists()) {
// ...
}
if (DB::table('orders')->where('finalized', 1)->doesntExist()) {
// ...
}
Select Statements
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:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
$users = DB::table('users')
->select('name', 'email as user_email')
->get();
The distinct
method allows you to force the
query to return distinct results:
$users = DB::table('users')->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:
$query = DB::table('users')->select('name');
$users = $query->addSelect('age')->get();
Raw Expressions
Sometimes you may need to insert an arbitrary string into
a query. To create a raw string expression, you may use
the raw
method provided by the
DB
facade:
$users = DB::table('users')
->select(DB::raw('count(*) as user_count, status'))
->where('status', '<>', 1)
->groupBy('status')
->get();
Warning!
Raw statements will be injected into the query as strings, so you should be extremely careful to avoid creating SQL injection vulnerabilities.
Raw Methods
Instead of using the DB::raw
method, you may
also use the following methods to insert a raw
expression into various parts of your query.
Remember, Laravel can not guarantee that any
query using raw expressions is protected against SQL
injection vulnerabilities.
selectRaw
The selectRaw
method can be used in place of
addSelect(DB::raw(/* ... */))
. This method
accepts an optional array of bindings as its second
argument:
$orders = DB::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:
$orders = DB::table('orders')
->whereRaw('price > IF(state = "TX", ?, 100)', [200])
->get();
havingRaw / orHavingRaw
The havingRaw
and orHavingRaw
methods may be used to provide a raw string as the value
of the "having" clause. These methods accept
an optional array of bindings as their second
argument:
$orders = DB::table('orders')
->select('department', DB::raw('SUM(price) as total_sales'))
->groupBy('department')
->havingRaw('SUM(price) > ?', [2500])
->get();
orderByRaw
The orderByRaw
method may be used to provide
a raw string as the value of the "order by"
clause:
$orders = DB::table('orders')
->orderByRaw('updated_at - created_at DESC')
->get();
groupByRaw
The groupByRaw
method may be used to provide
a raw string as the value of the group by
clause:
$orders = DB::table('orders')
->select('city', 'state')
->groupByRaw('city, state')
->get();
Joins
Inner Join Clause
The query builder may also be used to add join clauses to
your queries. 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 may even join
multiple tables in a single query:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
$users = DB::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:
$users = DB::table('users')
->leftJoin('posts', 'users.id', '=', 'posts.user_id')
->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->rightJoin('posts', 'users.id', '=', 'posts.user_id')
->get();
Cross Join Clause
You may use the crossJoin
method to perform
a "cross join". Cross joins generate a
cartesian product between the first table and the joined
table:
$sizes = DB::table('sizes')
->crossJoin('colors')
->get();
Advanced Join Clauses
You may also specify more advanced join clauses. To get
started, pass a closure as the second argument to the
join
method. The closure will receive a
Illuminate\Database\Query\JoinClause
instance which allows you to specify constraints on the
"join" clause:
DB::table('users')
->join('contacts', function (JoinClause $join) {
$join->on('users.id', '=', 'contacts.user_id')->orOn(/* ... */);
})
->get();
If you would like to use a "where" clause on
your joins, you may use the where
and
orWhere
methods provided by the
JoinClause
instance. Instead of comparing
two columns, these methods will compare the column
against a value:
DB::table('users')
->join('contacts', function (JoinClause $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 receives three arguments: the subquery, its
table alias, and a closure that defines the related
columns. In this example, we will retrieve a collection
of users where each user record also contains the
created_at
timestamp of the user's most
recently published blog post:
$latestPosts = DB::table('posts')
->select('user_id', DB::raw('MAX(created_at) as last_post_created_at'))
->where('is_published', true)
->groupBy('user_id');
$users = DB::table('users')
->joinSub($latestPosts, 'latest_posts', function (JoinClause $join) {
$join->on('users.id', '=', 'latest_posts.user_id');
})->get();
Lateral Joins
Warning!
Lateral joins are currently supported by PostgreSQL, MySQL >= 8.0.14, and SQL Server.
You may use the joinLateral
and
leftJoinLateral
methods to perform a
"lateral join" with a subquery. Each of these
methods receives two arguments: the subquery and its
table alias. The join condition(s) should be specified
within the where
clause of the given
subquery. Lateral joins are evaluated for each row and
can reference columns outside the subquery.
In this example, we will retrieve a collection of users
as well as the user's three most recent blog posts. Each
user can produce up to three rows in the result set: one
for each of their most recent blog posts. The join
condition is specified with a whereColumn
clause within the subquery, referencing the current user
row:
$latestPosts = DB::table('posts')
->select('id as post_id', 'title as post_title', 'created_at as post_created_at')
->whereColumn('user_id', 'users.id')
->orderBy('created_at', 'desc')
->limit(3);
$users = DB::table('users')
->joinLateral($latestPosts, 'latest_posts')
->get();
Unions
The query builder also provides a convenient method to
"union" two or more queries together. For
example, you may create an initial query and use the
union
method to union it with more
queries:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
$first = DB::table('users')
->whereNull('first_name');
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNull('last_name')
->union($first)
->get();
In addition to the union
method, the query
builder provides a unionAll
method. Queries
that are combined using the unionAll
method
will not have their duplicate results removed. The
unionAll
method has the same method
signature as the union
method.
Basic Where Clauses
Where Clauses
You may use the query builder's where
method
to add "where" clauses to the query. The most
basic call to the where
method 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. The third
argument is the value to compare against the column's
value.
For example, the following query retrieves users where
the value of the votes
column is equal to
100
and the value of the age
column is greater than 35
:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '=', 100)
->where('age', '>', 35)
->get();
For convenience, if you want to verify that a column is
=
to a given value, you may pass the value
as the second argument to the where
method.
Laravel will assume you would like to use the
=
operator:
$users = DB::table('users')->where('votes', 100)->get();
As previously mentioned, you may use any operator that is supported by your database system:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '>=', 100)
->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '<>', 100)
->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('name', 'like', 'T%')
->get();
You may also pass an array of conditions to the
where
function. Each element of the array
should be an array containing the three arguments
typically passed to the where
method:
$users = DB::table('users')->where([
['status', '=', '1'],
['subscribed', '<>', '1'],
])->get();
Warning!
PDO does not support binding column names. Therefore, you should never allow user input to dictate the column names referenced by your queries, including "order by" columns.
Or Where Clauses
When chaining together calls to the query builder's
where
method, the "where" clauses
will be joined together using the and
operator. However, you may use the orWhere
method to join a clause to the query using the
or
operator. The orWhere
method accepts the same arguments as the
where
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '>', 100)
->orWhere('name', 'John')
->get();
If you need to group an "or" condition within
parentheses, you may pass a closure as the first
argument to the orWhere
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '>', 100)
->orWhere(function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('name', 'Abigail')
->where('votes', '>', 50);
})
->get();
The example above will produce the following SQL:
select * from users where votes > 100 or (name = 'Abigail' and votes > 50)
Warning!
You should always grouporWhere
calls in order to avoid unexpected behavior when global scopes are applied.
Where Not Clauses
The whereNot
and orWhereNot
methods may be used to negate a given group of query
constraints. For example, the following query excludes
products that are on clearance or which have a price
that is less than ten:
$products = DB::table('products')
->whereNot(function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('clearance', true)
->orWhere('price', '<', 10);
})
->get();
Where Any / All Clauses
Sometimes you may need to apply the same query
constraints to multiple columns. For example, you may
want to retrieve all records where any columns in a
given list are LIKE
a given value. You may
accomplish this using the whereAny
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('active', true)
->whereAny([
'name',
'email',
'phone',
], 'LIKE', 'Example%')
->get();
The query above will result in the following SQL:
SELECT *
FROM users
WHERE active = true AND (
name LIKE 'Example%' OR
email LIKE 'Example%' OR
phone LIKE 'Example%'
)
Similarly, the whereAll
method may be used
to retrieve records where all of the given columns match
a given constraint:
$posts = DB::table('posts')
->where('published', true)
->whereAll([
'title',
'content',
], 'LIKE', '%Laravel%')
->get();
The query above will result in the following SQL:
SELECT *
FROM posts
WHERE published = true AND (
title LIKE '%Laravel%' AND
content LIKE '%Laravel%'
)
JSON Where Clauses
Laravel also supports querying JSON column types on
databases that provide support for JSON column types.
Currently, this includes MySQL 5.7 , PostgreSQL, SQL
Server 2016, and SQLite 3.39.0 (with the JSON1
extension). To query a JSON column, use the
->
operator:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('preferences->dining->meal', 'salad')
->get();
You may use whereJsonContains
to query JSON
arrays:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereJsonContains('options->languages', 'en')
->get();
If your application uses the MySQL or PostgreSQL
databases, you may pass an array of values to the
whereJsonContains
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereJsonContains('options->languages', ['en', 'de'])
->get();
You may use whereJsonLength
method to query
JSON arrays by their length:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereJsonLength('options->languages', 0)
->get();
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereJsonLength('options->languages', '>', 1)
->get();
Additional Where Clauses
whereBetween / orWhereBetween
The whereBetween
method verifies that a
column's value is between two values:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereBetween('votes', [1, 100])
->get();
whereNotBetween / orWhereNotBetween
The whereNotBetween
method verifies that a
column's value lies outside of two values:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNotBetween('votes', [1, 100])
->get();
whereBetweenColumns / whereNotBetweenColumns / orWhereBetweenColumns / orWhereNotBetweenColumns
The whereBetweenColumns
method verifies that
a column's value is between the two values of two
columns in the same table row:
$patients = DB::table('patients')
->whereBetweenColumns('weight', ['minimum_allowed_weight', 'maximum_allowed_weight'])
->get();
The whereNotBetweenColumns
method verifies
that a column's value lies outside the two values of two
columns in the same table row:
$patients = DB::table('patients')
->whereNotBetweenColumns('weight', ['minimum_allowed_weight', 'maximum_allowed_weight'])
->get();
whereIn / whereNotIn / orWhereIn / orWhereNotIn
The whereIn
method verifies that a given
column's value is contained within the given array:
$users = DB::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:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNotIn('id', [1, 2, 3])
->get();
You may also provide a query object as the
whereIn
method's second argument:
$activeUsers = DB::table('users')->select('id')->where('is_active', 1);
$users = DB::table('comments')
->whereIn('user_id', $activeUsers)
->get();
The example above will produce the following SQL:
select * from comments where user_id in (
select id
from users
where is_active = 1
)
Warning!
If you are adding a large array of integer bindings to your query, thewhereIntegerInRaw
orwhereIntegerNotInRaw
methods may be used to greatly reduce your memory usage.
whereNull / whereNotNull / orWhereNull / orWhereNotNull
The whereNull
method verifies that the value
of the given column is NULL
:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereNull('updated_at')
->get();
The whereNotNull
method verifies that the
column's value is not NULL
:
$users = DB::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:
$users = DB::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:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereMonth('created_at', '12')
->get();
The whereDay
method may be used to compare a
column's value against a specific day of the month:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereDay('created_at', '31')
->get();
The whereYear
method may be used to compare
a column's value against a specific year:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereYear('created_at', '2016')
->get();
The whereTime
method may be used to compare
a column's value against a specific time:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereTime('created_at', '=', '11:20:45')
->get();
whereColumn / orWhereColumn
The whereColumn
method may be used to verify
that two columns are equal:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereColumn('first_name', 'last_name')
->get();
You may also pass a comparison operator to the
whereColumn
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereColumn('updated_at', '>', 'created_at')
->get();
You may also pass an array of column comparisons to the
whereColumn
method. These conditions will
be joined using the and
operator:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereColumn([
['first_name', '=', 'last_name'],
['updated_at', '>', 'created_at'],
])->get();
Logical Grouping
Sometimes you may need to group several "where"
clauses within parentheses in order to achieve your
query's desired logical grouping. In fact, you should
generally always group calls to the orWhere
method in parentheses in order to avoid unexpected query
behavior. To accomplish this, you may pass a closure to
the where
method:
$users = DB::table('users')
->where('name', '=', 'John')
->where(function (Builder $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')
Warning!
You should always grouporWhere
calls in order to avoid unexpected behavior when global scopes are applied.
Advanced Where Clauses
Where Exists Clauses
The whereExists
method allows you to write
"where exists" SQL clauses. The
whereExists
method accepts a closure which
will receive a query builder instance, allowing you to
define the query that should be placed inside of the
"exists" clause:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereExists(function (Builder $query) {
$query->select(DB::raw(1))
->from('orders')
->whereColumn('orders.user_id', 'users.id');
})
->get();
Alternatively, you may provide a query object to the
whereExists
method instead of a
closure:
$orders = DB::table('orders')
->select(DB::raw(1))
->whereColumn('orders.user_id', 'users.id');
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereExists($orders)
->get();
Both of the examples above will produce the following SQL:
select * from users
where exists (
select 1
from orders
where orders.user_id = users.id
)
Subquery Where Clauses
Sometimes you may need to construct a "where"
clause that compares the results of a subquery to a
given value. You may accomplish this by passing a
closure and a value to the where
method.
For example, the following query will retrieve all users
who have a recent "membership" of a given
type;
use App\Models\User;
use Illuminate\Database\Query\Builder;
$users = User::where(function (Builder $query) {
$query->select('type')
->from('membership')
->whereColumn('membership.user_id', 'users.id')
->orderByDesc('membership.start_date')
->limit(1);
}, 'Pro')->get();
Or, you may need to construct a "where" clause
that compares a column to the results of a subquery. You
may accomplish this by passing a column, operator, and
closure to the where
method. For example,
the following query will retrieve all income records
where the amount is less than average;
use App\Models\Income;
use Illuminate\Database\Query\Builder;
$incomes = Income::where('amount', '<', function (Builder $query) {
$query->selectRaw('avg(i.amount)')->from('incomes as i');
})->get();
Full Text Where Clauses
Warning!
Full text where clauses are currently supported by MySQL and PostgreSQL.
The whereFullText
and
orWhereFullText
methods may be used to add
full text "where" clauses to a query for
columns that have full
text indexes. These methods will be transformed
into the appropriate SQL for the underlying database
system by Laravel. For example, a MATCH
AGAINST
clause will be generated for
applications utilizing MySQL:
$users = DB::table('users')
->whereFullText('bio', 'web developer')
->get();
Ordering, Grouping, Limit and Offset
Ordering
The orderBy
Method
The orderBy
method allows you to sort the
results of the query by a given column. The first
argument accepted by the orderBy
method
should be the column you wish to sort by, while the
second argument determines the direction of the sort and
may be either asc
or desc
:
$users = DB::table('users')
->orderBy('name', 'desc')
->get();
To sort by multiple columns, you may simply invoke
orderBy
as many times as necessary:
$users = DB::table('users')
->orderBy('name', 'desc')
->orderBy('email', 'asc')
->get();
The latest
and oldest
Methods
The latest
and oldest
methods
allow you to easily order results by date. By default,
the result will be ordered by the table's
created_at
column. Or, you may pass the
column name that you wish to sort by:
$user = DB::table('users')
->latest()
->first();
Random Ordering
The inRandomOrder
method may be used to sort
the query results randomly. For example, you may use
this method to fetch a random user:
$randomUser = DB::table('users')
->inRandomOrder()
->first();
Removing Existing Orderings
The reorder
method removes all of the
"order by" clauses that have previously been
applied to the query:
$query = DB::table('users')->orderBy('name');
$unorderedUsers = $query->reorder()->get();
You may pass a column and direction when calling the
reorder
method in order to remove all
existing "order by" clauses and apply an
entirely new order to the query:
$query = DB::table('users')->orderBy('name');
$usersOrderedByEmail = $query->reorder('email', 'desc')->get();
Grouping
The groupBy
and having
Methods
As you might expect, 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:
$users = DB::table('users')
->groupBy('account_id')
->having('account_id', '>', 100)
->get();
You can use the havingBetween
method to
filter the results within a given range:
$report = DB::table('orders')
->selectRaw('count(id) as number_of_orders, customer_id')
->groupBy('customer_id')
->havingBetween('number_of_orders', [5, 15])
->get();
You may pass multiple arguments to the
groupBy
method to group by multiple
columns:
$users = DB::table('users')
->groupBy('first_name', 'status')
->having('account_id', '>', 100)
->get();
To build more advanced having
statements,
see the havingRaw
method.
Limit and Offset
The skip
and take
Methods
You may use the skip
and take
methods to limit the number of results returned from the
query or to skip a given number of results in the
query:
$users = DB::table('users')->skip(10)->take(5)->get();
Alternatively, you may use the limit
and
offset
methods. These methods are
functionally equivalent to the take
and
skip
methods, respectively:
$users = DB::table('users')
->offset(10)
->limit(5)
->get();
Conditional Clauses
Sometimes you may want certain query clauses to apply to
a query based on another condition. For instance, you
may only want to apply a where
statement if
a given input value is present on the incoming HTTP
request. You may accomplish this using the
when
method:
$role = $request->string('role');
$users = DB::table('users')
->when($role, function (Builder $query, string $role) {
$query->where('role_id', $role);
})
->get();
The when
method only executes the given
closure when the first argument is true
. If
the first argument is false
, the closure
will not be executed. So, in the example above, the
closure given to the when
method will only
be invoked if the role
field is present on
the incoming request and evaluates to
true
.
You may pass another closure as the third argument to the
when
method. This closure will only execute
if the first argument evaluates as false
.
To illustrate how this feature may be used, we will use
it to configure the default ordering of a query:
$sortByVotes = $request->boolean('sort_by_votes');
$users = DB::table('users')
->when($sortByVotes, function (Builder $query, bool $sortByVotes) {
$query->orderBy('votes');
}, function (Builder $query) {
$query->orderBy('name');
})
->get();
Insert Statements
The query builder also provides an insert
method that may be used to insert records into the
database table. The insert
method accepts
an array of column names and values:
DB::table('users')->insert([
'email' => 'kayla@example.com',
'votes' => 0
]);
You may insert several records at once by passing an array of arrays. Each array represents a record that should be inserted into the table:
DB::table('users')->insert([
['email' => 'picard@example.com', 'votes' => 0],
['email' => 'janeway@example.com', 'votes' => 0],
]);
The insertOrIgnore
method will ignore errors
while inserting records into the database. When using
this method, you should be aware that duplicate record
errors will be ignored and other types of errors may
also be ignored depending on the database engine. For
example, insertOrIgnore
will bypass
MySQL's strict mode:
DB::table('users')->insertOrIgnore([
['id' => 1, 'email' => 'sisko@example.com'],
['id' => 2, 'email' => 'archer@example.com'],
]);
The insertUsing
method will insert new
records into the table while using a subquery to
determine the data that should be inserted:
DB::table('pruned_users')->insertUsing([
'id', 'name', 'email', 'email_verified_at'
], DB::table('users')->select(
'id', 'name', 'email', 'email_verified_at'
)->where('updated_at', '<=', now()->subMonth()));
Auto-Incrementing IDs
If the table has an auto-incrementing id, use the
insertGetId
method to insert a record and
then retrieve the ID:
$id = DB::table('users')->insertGetId(
['email' => 'john@example.com', 'votes' => 0]
);
Warning!
When using PostgreSQL theinsertGetId
method expects the auto-incrementing column to be namedid
. If you would like to retrieve the ID from a different "sequence", you may pass the column name as the second parameter to theinsertGetId
method.
Upserts
The upsert
method will insert records that
do not exist and update the records that already exist
with new values that you may specify. The method's first
argument consists of the values to insert or update,
while the second argument lists the column(s) that
uniquely identify records within the associated table.
The method's third and final argument is an array of
columns that should be updated if a matching record
already exists in the database:
DB::table('flights')->upsert(
[
['departure' => 'Oakland', 'destination' => 'San Diego', 'price' => 99],
['departure' => 'Chicago', 'destination' => 'New York', 'price' => 150]
],
['departure', 'destination'],
['price']
);
In the example above, Laravel will attempt to insert two
records. If a record already exists with the same
departure
and destination
column values, Laravel will update that record's
price
column.
Warning!
All databases except SQL Server require the columns in the second argument of theupsert
method to have a "primary" or "unique" index. In addition, the MySQL database driver ignores the second argument of theupsert
method and always uses the "primary" and "unique" indexes of the table to detect existing records.
Update Statements
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 indicating the columns
to be updated. The update
method returns
the number of affected rows. You may constrain the
update
query using where
clauses:
$affected = DB::table('users')
->where('id', 1)
->update(['votes' => 1]);
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 indicating the columns to be updated.
The updateOrInsert
method will 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:
DB::table('users')
->updateOrInsert(
['email' => 'john@example.com', 'name' => 'John'],
['votes' => '2']
);
Updating JSON Columns
When updating a JSON column, you should use
->
syntax to update the appropriate key
in the JSON object. This operation is supported on MySQL
5.7 and PostgreSQL 9.5 :
$affected = DB::table('users')
->where('id', 1)
->update(['options->enabled' => true]);
Increment and Decrement
The query builder also provides convenient methods for incrementing or decrementing the value of a given column. Both of these methods accept at least one argument: the column to modify. A second argument may be provided to specify the amount by which the column should be incremented or decremented:
DB::table('users')->increment('votes');
DB::table('users')->increment('votes', 5);
DB::table('users')->decrement('votes');
DB::table('users')->decrement('votes', 5);
If needed, you may also specify additional columns to update during the increment or decrement operation:
DB::table('users')->increment('votes', 1, ['name' => 'John']);
In addition, you may increment or decrement multiple
columns at once using the incrementEach
and
decrementEach
methods:
DB::table('users')->incrementEach([
'votes' => 5,
'balance' => 100,
]);
Delete Statements
The query builder's delete
method may be
used to delete records from the table. The
delete
method returns the number of
affected rows. You may constrain delete
statements by adding "where" clauses before
calling the delete
method:
$deleted = DB::table('users')->delete();
$deleted = DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->delete();
If you wish to truncate an entire table, which will
remove all records from the table and reset the
auto-incrementing ID to zero, you may use the
truncate
method:
DB::table('users')->truncate();
Table Truncation and PostgreSQL
When truncating a PostgreSQL database, the
CASCADE
behavior will be applied. This
means that all foreign key related records in other
tables will be deleted as well.
Pessimistic Locking
The query builder also includes a few functions to help
you achieve "pessimistic locking" when
executing your select
statements. To
execute a statement with a "shared lock", you
may call the sharedLock
method. A shared
lock prevents the selected rows from being modified
until your transaction is committed:
DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '>', 100)
->sharedLock()
->get();
Alternatively, you may use the lockForUpdate
method. A "for update" lock prevents the
selected records from being modified or from being
selected with another shared lock:
DB::table('users')
->where('votes', '>', 100)
->lockForUpdate()
->get();
Debugging
You may use the dd
and dump
methods while building a query to dump the current query
bindings and SQL. The dd
method will
display the debug information and then stop executing
the request. The dump
method will display
the debug information but allow the request to continue
executing:
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->dd();
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->dump();
The dumpRawSql
and ddRawSql
methods may be invoked on a query to dump the query's
SQL with all parameter bindings properly
substituted:
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->dumpRawSql();
DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->ddRawSql();