25

I would like to generate following query using yii2:

SELECT COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM lead WHERE approved = 1 GROUP BY promoter_location_id, lead_type_id

I have tried:

$leadsCount = Lead::find()
->where('approved = 1')
->groupBy(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id'])
->count();

Which generates this query:

SELECT COUNT(*) FROM (SELECT * FROM `lead` WHERE approved = 1 GROUP BY `promoter_location_id`, `lead_type_id`) `c`

In yii 1.x I would've done the following:

$criteria = new CDbCriteria();
$criteria->select = 'COUNT(*) AS cnt';
$criteria->group = array('promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id');

Thanks!

2
  • you can use create command to write your mysql query
    – Kshitiz
    Jun 25, 2014 at 8:55
  • Please post the solution as an answer.
    – Cthulhu
    Jun 26, 2014 at 13:43

5 Answers 5

37

Solution:

$leadsCount = Lead::find()
->select(['COUNT(*) AS cnt'])
->where('approved = 1')
->groupBy(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id'])
->all();

and add public $cnt to the model, in my case Lead.

As Kshitiz also stated, you could also just use yii\db\Query::createCommand().

1
  • 2
    This works and I had to add the public variable to the model class and mentioned by @deacs and replace the all() method with ->createCommand()->queryAll(); Also note that my select() method has multiples ->select(['type, date(significant_timestamp) AS significant_timestamp, COUNT(*) AS size']) Sep 5, 2017 at 19:18
9

You can get the count by using count() in the select Query

$leadCount = Lead::find()
->where(['approved'=>'1'])
->groupBy(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id'])
->count();

Reference Link for various functions of select query

0
8

If you are just interested in the count, use yii\db\Query as mentioned by others. Won't require any changes to your model:

$leadsCount = (new yii\db\Query())
    ->from('lead')
    ->where('approved = 1')
    ->groupBy(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id'])
    ->count();

Here's a link to the Yii2 API documentation

4

Without adding the $cnt property to model

$leadsCount = Lead::find()
->select(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id','COUNT(*) AS cnt'])
->where('approved = 1')
->groupBy(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id'])
->createCommand()->queryAll();
3
  • 1
    Please do not merely post code but also add a few words explaining what the pivotal difference is.
    – mkl
    Feb 21, 2017 at 12:09
  • But we get not ActiveRecords as a result Jun 16, 2017 at 10:59
  • Yes. This query will not return the ActiveRecords since you define the ->select(['promoter_location_id', 'lead_type_id','COUNT(*) AS cnt'])
    – t6nnp6nn
    Jul 8, 2018 at 10:20
0

Just a note, in case it helps anyone, that a getter used as a property is countable (whereas if called as a function it will return 1). In this example, I have a Category class with Listings joined by listing_to_category. To get Active, Approved Listings for the Category, I return an ActiveQuery, thus:

/**
 * @return \yii\db\ActiveQuery
 */
public function getListingsApprovedActive() {
        return $this->hasMany(Listing::className(), ['listing_id' => 'listing_id'])
                                ->viaTable('listing_to_category', ['category_id' => 'category_id'])
                                ->andWhere(['active' => 1])->andWhere(['approved' => 1]);
}

Calling count on the property of the Category will return the record count:

count($oCat->listingsApprovedActive)

Calling count on the function will return 1:

count($oCat->getListingsApprovedActive())

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.