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QueryBuilderParser is designed mainly to be used inside Laravel projects, however it can be used outside Laravel projects by using Illuminate/Database.
A simple to use query builder for the jQuery QueryBuilder plugin.
    use timgws\QueryBuilderParser;
    $table = DB::table('table_of_data_to_integrate');
    $qbp = new QueryBuilderParser(
        // provide here a list of allowable rows from the query builder.
        // NOTE: if a row is listed here, you will be able to create limits on that row from QBP.
        array( 'name', 'email' )
    );
    $query = $qbp->parse($input['querybuilder'], $table);
    $rows = $query->get();
    return Response::JSON($rows);This query when posted will create the following SQL query:
SELECT * FROM table_of_data_to_integrate WHERE `name` LIKE '%tim%' AND `email` LIKE '%@gmail.com'    use timgws\QueryBuilderParser;
    $table = DB::collection('data');
    $qbp = new QueryBuilderParser(
        // provide here a list of allowable rows from the query builder.
        // NOTE: if a row is listed here, you will be able to create limits on that row from QBP.
        array( 'name', 'email' )
    );
    $query = $qbp->parse($input['querybuilder'], $table);
    $rows = $query->get();
    return Response::JSON($rows);This query when posted will create the following MongoDB query:
    {
      "$and": [
        {
          "name": {
            "$regex": "tim"
          }
        },
        {
          "email": {
            "$regex": "@gmail\\.com$"
          }
        }
      ]
    }Note that to use this you will need to install and configure jenssegers/mongodb.
Mixed with Datatables, jQuery QueryBuilder makes for some true awesome, allowing limitless options for filtering data, and seeing the results on the fly.
    use timgws\QueryBuilderParser;
    
    class AdminUserController {
        function displayUserDatatable() {
            /* builder is POST'd by the datatable */
            $queryBuilderJSON = Input::get('rules');
            
            $show_columns = array('id', 'username', 'email_address');
            
            $query = new QueryBuilderParser($show_columns);
            
            /** Illuminate/Database/Query/Builder $queryBuilder **/
            $queryBuilder = $query->parse(DB::table('users'));
            
            return Datatable::query($queryBuilder)
                ->showColumns($show_columns)
                ->orderColumns($show_columns)
                ->searchColumns($show_columns)
                ->make()
        }
    }On the client side, a little bit of magic is required to make everything work.
    // the default rules, what will be used on page loads...
    var datatablesRequest = {};
    var _rules = defaultRules = {"condition":"AND","rules":[
        {"id":"active","field":"active","type":"integer","input":"radio","operator":"equal","value":"1"}
    ]};
    // a button/link that is used to update the rules.
    function updateFilters() {
        _rules = $('#querybuilder').queryBuilder('getRules');
        reloadDatatables();
    }
    function filterChange() {
        var _json = JSON.stringify( _rules );
        datatablesRequest = { rules: _json };
    }
    filterChange();
    function reloadDatatables() {
        /* Datatables first... */
        filterChange();
        $('.dataTable').each(function() {
            dt = $(this).dataTable();
            dt.fnDraw();
        })
    }
    jQuery(document).ready(function(){
        // dynamic table
        oTable = jQuery('.datatable').dataTable({
            "fnServerParams": function(aoData) {
                // add the extra parameters from the jQuery QueryBuilder to the Datatable endpoint...
                $.each(datatablesRequest , function(k,v){
                    aoData.push({"name": k, "value": v});
                })
            }
        })
    });JoinSupportingQueryBuilderParser is a version of QueryBuilderParser that supports building even more complex queries.
    $joinFields = array(
        'join1' => array(
            'from_table'      => 'master',
            'from_col'        => 'm_col',
            'to_table'        => 'subtable',
            'to_col'          => 's_col',
            'to_value_column' => 's_value',
        ),
        'join2' => array(
            'from_table'      => 'master2',
            'from_col'        => 'm2_col',
            'to_table'        => 'subtable2',
            'to_col'          => 's2_col',
            'to_value_column' => 's2_value',
            'not_exists'      => true,
        )
    );
    $table = DB::table('table_of_data_to_integrate');
    $jsqbp = new JoinSupportingQueryBuilderParser($fields, $this->getJoinFields());
    $test = $parser->parse($json, $builder);Which will build an SQL query similar to:
select * where exists (select 1 from `subtable` where subtable.s_col = master.m_col and `s_value` < ?)For simple queries, QueryBuilderParser should be enough.
Just as a footnote, there are right ways to export CSV files, and there are wrong ways.
For the right way, check out the question on StackOverflow, How can I output a UTF-8 CSV in PHP that Excel will read properly?
I use this code in a number of my projects, so if you do find an issue, please feel free to report it with GitHub's bug tracker for this project.
Alternatively, fork the project and make a pull request :)
