=head1 NAME DBIx::Struct - convenience SQL functions with Class::Struct-like row objects =head1 SYNOPSIS use DBIx::Struct; DBIx::Struct::connect($data_source, $username, $auth); my $row = one_row("table", $idField); print $row->field; $row->field('new data'); $row->update; my $rows = all_rows("table", {field => "some data"}); print $rows->[0]->field; =head1 DESCRIPTION Makes SQL queries from Perl data structures. It uses L module to parse "where" and "order by" structures. This module does B try to map all possible SQL features to Perl structures but it greatly simplifies really simple and most often used scenarios. Complex queries are also possible, but sometimes it'd better to use real SQL. =head1 USAGE Suppose you have tables session: session_key text unique, id_client integer references client(id), expires timestamp client id serial primary key, name text client_balance balance decimal(14,2), currency text, id_client integer references client(id), unique(currency, id_client) How to access this structure # get session object my $session = one_row("session", {session => $input->{session}, ip => $input->{ip}}); # throw exception when there's no session NoUser->throw("User is not logged in or does not exist") unless defined $session; # get client's row my $client = $session->Client; # strip microseconds part $client->filter_timestamp; # throw exception if client is blocked BlkUser->throw if $client->state eq 'blocked'; # set expire date $session->expire(\"now() + interval '2 day'"); # update session $session->update; # get usd client's balance from client_balance my $usd_balance = $client->refClientBalance(currency => "USD"); To use SQL use DBIx::Struct qw(connector); # ... my $name; connector->run(sub { ($name) = $_->selectrow_array('select name from client join ' . 'session on (id = id_client) where session_key = ?', undef, $input->{session}) } );