Updating records in your database tables.
When you have created or retrieved an object, you can save it to the database by calling its save() method. This method returns true
if the object passes all validations and the object was saved to the database. Otherwise, it returns false
.
This chapter will focus on how to update records. Read the Creating Records chapter for more information about how to create new records.
Let's start with an example of getting a blog post from the database, updating its title, and saving it back:
You can also change the values of one or more properties and save them to the database in one single call using the update()
method, like this:
You can also pass in name/value pairs to update()
as a struct. The main reason this method accepts a struct is to allow you to easily use it with forms.
This is how it would look if you wanted to update the properties for a post based on a submitted form.
It's also possible to combine named arguments with a struct, but then you need to name the struct argument as properties
.
Example:
To cut down even more on lines of code, you can also combine the reading and saving of the objects by using the class-level methods updateByKey() and updateAll().
Give the updateByKey() method a primary key value (or several if you use composite keys) in the key
argument, and it will update the corresponding record in your table with the properties you give it. You can pass in the properties either as named arguments or as a struct to the properties
argument.
This method returns the object with the primary key value you specified. If the object does not pass validation, it will be returned anyway, but nothing will be saved to the database.
By default, updateByKey() will fetch the object first and call the update()
method on it, thus invoking any callbacks and validations you have specified for the model. You can change this behavior by passing in instantiate=false
. Then it will just update the record from the table using a simple UPDATE query.
An example of using updateByKey() by passing a struct:
And an example of using updateByKey() by passing named arguments:
The updateAll() method allows you to update more than one record in a single call. You specify what records to update with the where
argument and tell Wheels what updates to make using named arguments for the properties.
The where
argument is used exactly as you specify it in the WHERE
clause of the query (with the exception that Wheels automatically wraps everything properly in cfqueryparam
tags). So make sure that you place those commas and quotes correctly!
An example:
Unlike updateByKey(), the updateAll() method will not instantiate the objects by default. That could be really slow if you wanted to update a lot of records at once.