Here's my attempt at it:
$query = $database->prepare('SELECT * FROM table WHERE column LIKE "?%"');
$query->execute(array('value'));
while ($results = $query->fetch())
{
echo $results['column'];
}
Figured it out right after I posted:
$query = $database->prepare('SELECT * FROM table WHERE column LIKE ?');
$query->execute(array('value%'));
while ($results = $query->fetch())
{
echo $results['column'];
}
like
is used ? how should the execute array executes in order ?
For those using named parameters, here's how to use LIKE
with %
partial matching for MySQL databases:
WHERE column_name LIKE CONCAT('%', :dangerousstring, '%')
where the named parameter is :dangerousstring
.
In other words, use explicitly unescaped %
signs in your own query that are separated and definitely not the user input.
Edit: Concatenation syntax for Oracle databases uses the concatenation operator: ||
, so it'll simply become:
WHERE column_name LIKE '%' || :dangerousstring || '%'
However there are caveats as @bobince mentions here that:
The difficulty comes when you want to allow a literal
%
or_
character in the search string, without having it act as a wildcard.
So that's something else to watch out for when combining like and parameterization.
LIKE CONCAT('%', :something, '%')
. Reference: stackoverflow.com/a/661207/201648
Apr 21, 2015 at 12:59
SELECT * FROM calculation WHERE ( email LIKE '%' || luza || '%' OR siteLocation LIKE '%'|| luza ||'%' OR company LIKE '%' ||luza ||'%' )
this would give me error.
Oct 26, 2018 at 14:28
and it means named placeholders can be used
. How it's even an issue with named placeholders when you concatenate in PHP? Obviously concatenating in PHP supports both named and positional and more portable as you can use the same query for any database. I don't really understand why so many people think there is any difference between named and positional placeholders.
Feb 2, 2020 at 8:51
$query = $database->prepare('SELECT * FROM table WHERE column LIKE ?');
$query->bindValue(1, "%$value%", PDO::PARAM_STR);
$query->execute();
if (!$query->rowCount() == 0)
{
while ($results = $query->fetch())
{
echo $results['column'] . "<br />\n";
}
}
else
{
echo 'Nothing found';
}
bindValue
protect against injection attacks? The accepted answer basically negates the value of using ?
placeholders by concatenating the search string to %
like in ye days of olde.
You can also try this one. I face similar problem but got result after research.
$query = $pdo_connection->prepare('SELECT * FROM table WHERE column LIKE :search');
$stmt= $pdo_connection->prepare($query);
$stmt->execute(array(':search' => '%'.$search_term.'%'));
$result = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
print_r($result);
I got this from php delusions
$search = "%$search%";
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT * FROM table WHERE name LIKE ?");
$stmt->execute([$search]);
$data = $stmt->fetchAll();
And it works for me, very simple. Like he says , you have to "prepare our complete literal first" before sending it to the query
PDO escapes "%" (May lead to sql injection): The use of the previous code will give the desire results when looking to match partial strings BUT if a visitor types the character "%" you will still get results even if you don't have anything stored in the data base (it may lead sql injections)
I've tried a lot of variation all with the same result PDO is escaping "%" leading unwanted/unexcited search results.
I though it was worth sharing if anyone has found a word around it please share it
I had a similar need but was using a variable grabbed from a form. I did it like this to get results from my PostgreSQL DB, using PHP:
<?php
$player = $_POST['search']; //variable from my search form
$find = $sqlPDO->prepare("SELECT player FROM salaries WHERE player ILIKE ?;");
$find->execute(['%'.$player.'%']);
while ($row = $find->fetch()) {
echo $row['player']."</br>";
}
?>
The "ILIKE" makes the search non-case sensitive, so a search for cart or Cart or cARt will all return the same results.
The only way I could get this to work was to put the %$search% into another variable.
if(isset($_POST['submit-search'])){
$search = $_POST['search'];
}
$query = 'SELECT * FROM posts WHERE post_title LIKE :search';
$value ="%$search%";
$stmt= $pdo->prepare($query);
$stmt->execute(array(':search' => $value));
I don't know if this is the best way to do it, in the while loop I used:
while ($r = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)){