Prepared statement bind parameters php

PDOStatement::bindValue

Binds a value to a corresponding named or question mark placeholder in the SQL statement that was used to prepare the statement.

Parameters

Parameter identifier. For a prepared statement using named placeholders, this will be a parameter name of the form :name . For a prepared statement using question mark placeholders, this will be the 1-indexed position of the parameter.

The value to bind to the parameter.

Explicit data type for the parameter using the PDO::PARAM_* constants.

Return Values

Returns true on success or false on failure.

Errors/Exceptions

Emits an error with level E_WARNING if the attribute PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE is set to PDO::ERRMODE_WARNING .

Throws a PDOException if the attribute PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE is set to PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION .

Examples

Example #1 Execute a prepared statement with named placeholders

/* Execute a prepared statement by binding PHP variables */
$calories = 150 ;
$colour = ‘red’ ;
$sth = $dbh -> prepare ( ‘SELECT name, colour, calories
FROM fruit
WHERE calories < :calories AND colour = :colour' );
$sth -> bindValue ( ‘calories’ , $calories , PDO :: PARAM_INT );
/* Names can be prefixed with colons «:» too (optional) */
$sth -> bindValue ( ‘:colour’ , $colour , PDO :: PARAM_STR );
$sth -> execute ();
?>

Example #2 Execute a prepared statement with question mark placeholders

/* Execute a prepared statement by binding PHP variables */
$calories = 150 ;
$colour = ‘red’ ;
$sth = $dbh -> prepare ( ‘SELECT name, colour, calories
FROM fruit
WHERE calories < ? AND colour = ?' );
$sth -> bindValue ( 1 , $calories , PDO :: PARAM_INT );
$sth -> bindValue ( 2 , $colour , PDO :: PARAM_STR );
$sth -> execute ();
?>

See Also

  • PDO::prepare() — Prepares a statement for execution and returns a statement object
  • PDOStatement::execute() — Executes a prepared statement
  • PDOStatement::bindParam() — Binds a parameter to the specified variable name

User Contributed Notes 14 notes

What the bindValue() docs fail to explain without reading them _very_ carefully is that bindParam() is passed to PDO byref — whereas bindValue() isn’t.

Thus with bindValue() you can do something like $stmt->bindValue(«:something», «bind this»); whereas with bindParam() it will fail because you can’t pass a string by reference, for example.

When binding parameters, apparently you can’t use a placeholder twice (e.g. «select * from mails where sender=:me or recipient=:me»), you’ll have to give them different names otherwise your query will return empty handed (but not fail, unfortunately). Just in case you’re struggling with something like this.

Be careful when trying to validate using PDO::PARAM_INT.

Take this sample into account:

/* php —version
* PHP 5.6.25 (cli) (built: Aug 24 2016 09:50:46)
* Copyright (c) 1997-2016 The PHP Group
* Zend Engine v2.6.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2016 Zend Technologies
*/

$id = ‘1a’ ;
$stm = $pdo -> prepare ( ‘select * from author where > );
$bind = $stm -> bindValue ( ‘:id’ , $id , PDO :: PARAM_INT );

$stm -> execute ();
$authors = $stm -> fetchAll ();

var_dump ( $id ); // string(2)
var_dump ( $bind ); // true
var_dump ((int) $id ); // int(1)
var_dump ( is_int ( $id )); // false
var_dump ( $authors ); // the author =(

// remember
var_dump ( 1 == ‘1’ ); // true
var_dump ( 1 === ‘1’ ); // false
var_dump ( 1 === ‘1a’ ); // false
var_dump ( 1 == ‘1a’ ); // true
?>

My opinion: bindValue() should test is_int() internaly first of anything,
It is a bug? I’m not sure.

Although bindValue() escapes quotes it does not escape «%» and «_», so be careful when using LIKE. A malicious parameter full of %%% can dump your entire database if you don’t escape the parameter yourself. PDO does not provide any other escape method to handle it.

Note that the third parameter ($data_type) in the majority of cases will not type cast the value into anything else to be used in the query, nor will it throw any sort of error if the type does not match up with the value provided. This parameter essentially has no effect whatsoever except throwing an error if it is set and is not a float, so do not think that it is adding any extra level of security to the queries.

The two exceptions where type casting is performed:

— if you use PDO::PDO_PARAM_INT and provide a boolean, it will be converted to a long
— if you use PDO::PDO_PARAM_BOOL and provide a long, it will be converted to a boolean

$query = ‘SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE username = :username AND `password` = ENCRYPT( :password, `crypt_password`)’ ;

// First try passing a random numerical value as the third parameter
var_dump ( $sth -> bindValue ( ‘:username’ , ‘bob’ , 12345.67 )); // bool(true)

// Next try passing a string using the boolean type
var_dump ( $sth -> bindValue ( ‘:password’ , ‘topsecret_pw’ , PDO :: PARAM_BOOL )); // bool(true)

$sth -> execute (); // Query is executed successfully
$result = $sth -> fetchAll (); // Returns the result of the query

This function is useful for bind value on an array. You can specify the type of the value in advance with $typeArray.

/**
* @param string $req : the query on which link the values
* @param array $array : associative array containing the values ​​to bind
* @param array $typeArray : associative array with the desired value for its corresponding key in $array
* */
function bindArrayValue ( $req , $array , $typeArray = false )
if( is_object ( $req ) && ( $req instanceof PDOStatement ))
foreach( $array as $key => $value )
if( $typeArray )
$req -> bindValue ( «: $key » , $value , $typeArray [ $key ]);
else
if( is_int ( $value ))
$param = PDO :: PARAM_INT ;
elseif( is_bool ( $value ))
$param = PDO :: PARAM_BOOL ;
elseif( is_null ( $value ))
$param = PDO :: PARAM_NULL ;
elseif( is_string ( $value ))
$param = PDO :: PARAM_STR ;
else
$param = FALSE ;

if( $param )
$req -> bindValue ( «: $key » , $value , $param );
>
>
>
>

/**
* ## EXEMPLE ##
* $array = array(‘language’ => ‘php’,’lines’ => 254, ‘publish’ => true);
* $typeArray = array(‘language’ => PDO::PARAM_STR,’lines’ => PDO::PARAM_INT,’publish’ => PDO::PARAM_BOOL);
* $req = ‘SELECT * FROM code WHERE language = :language AND lines = :lines AND publish = :publish’;
* You can bind $array like that :
* bindArrayValue($array,$req,$typeArray);
* The function is more useful when you use limit clause because they need an integer.
* */
?>

$sql = ‘SELECT * FROM myTable WHERE level & ?’ ;
$sth = \ App :: pdo ()-> prepare ( $sql );
$sth -> bindValue ( 1 , 0b0101 , \ PDO :: PARAM_INT );
$sth -> execute ();
$result = $sth -> fetchAll (\ PDO :: FETCH_ASSOC );

This actually works to bind NULL on an integer field in MySQL :

$stm->bindValue(‘:param’, null, PDO::PARAM_INT);

The reason that we cannot define the value variable for bindValue() after calling it, is because that it binds the value to the prepared statement immediately and does not wait until the execute() to happen.

The following code will issue a notice and prevent the query from taking place:
$st = $db -> prepare ( «SELECT * FROM posts WHERE » );
$st -> bindValue ( ‘:val’ , $val );

$val = ‘2’ ;
$st -> execute ();
?>
The output:
Notice: Undefined variable: val.

Whereas in the case of bindParam, the evaluation of the value to the parameter will not be performed until the call of execute(). And that’s to gain the benefit of reference passing.
$st = $db -> prepare ( «SELECT * FROM posts WHERE » );
$st -> bindParam ( ‘:val’ , $val );

$val = ‘2’ ;
//
// some code
//
$val = ‘3’ ; // re-assigning the value variable
$st -> execute ();
?>
works fine.

bindValue with data_type depend parameter name

$db = new PDO (. );
$db -> setAttribute ( PDO :: ATTR_STATEMENT_CLASS , array ( ‘MY_PDOStatement ‘ , array ( $db )));

class MY_PDOStatement extends PDOStatement

public function execute ( $input = array ()) foreach ( $input as $param => $value ) if ( preg_match ( ‘/_id$/’ , $param ))
$this -> bindValue ( $param , $value , PDO :: PARAM_INT );
else
$this -> bindValue ( $param , $value , PDO :: PARAM_STR );
>
return parent :: execute ();
>

For bind whole array at once

function PDOBindArray (& $poStatement , & $paArray )

@ $poStatement -> bindValue ( ‘:’ . $k , $v );

$stmt = $dbh -> prepare ( «INSERT INTO tExample (id,value) VALUES (:id,:value)» );

$taValues = array(
‘id’ => ‘1’ ,
‘value’ => ‘2’
); // array

PDOBindArray ( $stmt , $taValues );

Be careful in edge cases!
With MySQL native prepares your integer can be wrapped around on some machines:

$x = 2147483648 ;
var_dump ( $x ); // prints: int(2147483648)
$s = $db -> prepare ( ‘SELECT :int AS I, :str AS S;’ );
$s -> bindValue ( ‘:int’ , $x , PDO :: PARAM_INT );
$s -> bindValue ( ‘:str’ , $x , PDO :: PARAM_STR );
$s -> execute ();
var_dump ( $s -> fetchAll ( PDO :: FETCH_ASSOC ) );
/* prints: array(2) [«I»]=>
string(11) «-2147483648»
[«S»]=>
string(10) «2147483648»
> */
?>

Also, trying to bind PDO::PARAM_BOOL in MySQL with native prepares can make your query silently fail and return empty set.

Emulated prepares work more stable in this cases, because they convert everything to strings and just decide whenever to quote argument or not to quote.

The parameter must names like a php variable.
e.g.
$dbh = new PDO ( «mysql:dbname=test;host=127.0.0.1» , «user» , «password» );

$sth = $dbh -> prepare ( «SELECT * FROM `table` WHERE `last-name`=:last-name» );

// output: PHP Warning: PDOStatement::execute(): SQLSTATE[HY093]: Invalid parameter number: parameter was not defined
?>

If you want to bind a null value to a database field you must use ‘NULL’ in quotes (for MySQL):

$stmt -> bindValue (: fieldName , ‘NULL’ );

// not
$stmt -> bindValue (: fieldName , NULL );
// or
$stmt -> bindValue (: fieldName , null );

?>

Using PHP’s null/NULL as a value doesn’t work.

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