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Filtering SOQL results with optional conditionals


How to Apply a DateTime Filter when using SOQL via REST APIMultiple SOQL queries in single requestWhy is my SOQl Query with OR filtering this much slow?Filter and search is not workingSOQL Statement with Uppercase FunctionSOQL: Differing results when adding a relationship fieldSOQL query not returning resultsUsing INCLUDES multiple times in a SOQL queryUse SOQL to select records filtered by lookup fieldFiltering results of an SOQL query













2















I am creating a web component that allows users to filter the results of some data based on some optional filtering fields. In SOQL, how do you handle returning results when a filter is not set?



For example, I have a Student__c object. I want users to be able to filter by the the Student__c's Field A (String), Field B (Integer) and Field C (String).



I have this function:



function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE ....];
}


I call this function to load some data to display in a graph to a user. The user doesn't have to filter the students by nationality, school, and birthYear, so by default, these values will be null, and should return the results of all students. But if the user opts to filter by birthYear, then it should filter by birthYear. If they want to filter by birthYear and school, then it should do so.



I'm trying to avoid having to do something like:



function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
if (nationality == null && school == null, && birthYear == null) {
return [SELECT * FROM Student__c];
} else if (nationality != null && school == null, && birthYear == null)
return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE nationality__c == :nationality];
}
else if ( .... ) {
...
}


Instead of having different queries for the different scenarios (3 field filters is 8 different queries, 4 fields is 15 different, etc.) I would like my query to handle it all. I was thinking about using a contains, but SOQL doesn't have that from what I believe...










share|improve this question





























    2















    I am creating a web component that allows users to filter the results of some data based on some optional filtering fields. In SOQL, how do you handle returning results when a filter is not set?



    For example, I have a Student__c object. I want users to be able to filter by the the Student__c's Field A (String), Field B (Integer) and Field C (String).



    I have this function:



    function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
    return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE ....];
    }


    I call this function to load some data to display in a graph to a user. The user doesn't have to filter the students by nationality, school, and birthYear, so by default, these values will be null, and should return the results of all students. But if the user opts to filter by birthYear, then it should filter by birthYear. If they want to filter by birthYear and school, then it should do so.



    I'm trying to avoid having to do something like:



    function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
    if (nationality == null && school == null, && birthYear == null) {
    return [SELECT * FROM Student__c];
    } else if (nationality != null && school == null, && birthYear == null)
    return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE nationality__c == :nationality];
    }
    else if ( .... ) {
    ...
    }


    Instead of having different queries for the different scenarios (3 field filters is 8 different queries, 4 fields is 15 different, etc.) I would like my query to handle it all. I was thinking about using a contains, but SOQL doesn't have that from what I believe...










    share|improve this question



























      2












      2








      2








      I am creating a web component that allows users to filter the results of some data based on some optional filtering fields. In SOQL, how do you handle returning results when a filter is not set?



      For example, I have a Student__c object. I want users to be able to filter by the the Student__c's Field A (String), Field B (Integer) and Field C (String).



      I have this function:



      function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
      return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE ....];
      }


      I call this function to load some data to display in a graph to a user. The user doesn't have to filter the students by nationality, school, and birthYear, so by default, these values will be null, and should return the results of all students. But if the user opts to filter by birthYear, then it should filter by birthYear. If they want to filter by birthYear and school, then it should do so.



      I'm trying to avoid having to do something like:



      function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
      if (nationality == null && school == null, && birthYear == null) {
      return [SELECT * FROM Student__c];
      } else if (nationality != null && school == null, && birthYear == null)
      return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE nationality__c == :nationality];
      }
      else if ( .... ) {
      ...
      }


      Instead of having different queries for the different scenarios (3 field filters is 8 different queries, 4 fields is 15 different, etc.) I would like my query to handle it all. I was thinking about using a contains, but SOQL doesn't have that from what I believe...










      share|improve this question
















      I am creating a web component that allows users to filter the results of some data based on some optional filtering fields. In SOQL, how do you handle returning results when a filter is not set?



      For example, I have a Student__c object. I want users to be able to filter by the the Student__c's Field A (String), Field B (Integer) and Field C (String).



      I have this function:



      function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
      return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE ....];
      }


      I call this function to load some data to display in a graph to a user. The user doesn't have to filter the students by nationality, school, and birthYear, so by default, these values will be null, and should return the results of all students. But if the user opts to filter by birthYear, then it should filter by birthYear. If they want to filter by birthYear and school, then it should do so.



      I'm trying to avoid having to do something like:



      function getStudents(nationality, school, birthYear) {
      if (nationality == null && school == null, && birthYear == null) {
      return [SELECT * FROM Student__c];
      } else if (nationality != null && school == null, && birthYear == null)
      return [SELECT * FROM Student__c WHERE nationality__c == :nationality];
      }
      else if ( .... ) {
      ...
      }


      Instead of having different queries for the different scenarios (3 field filters is 8 different queries, 4 fields is 15 different, etc.) I would like my query to handle it all. I was thinking about using a contains, but SOQL doesn't have that from what I believe...







      soql filters lightning-web-components






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 1 hour ago









      David Reed

      36.8k82255




      36.8k82255










      asked 1 hour ago









      BlondeSwanBlondeSwan

      1567




      1567






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          This is a great opportunity to apply Dynamic SOQL. Here's one way to approach it.



          Start with a query template string, with placeholders for your dynamic entries:



          String queryTemplate = 'SELECT [your list of fields] FROM Student__c {1} {2}';


          We'll dynamically construct the content of the WHERE clause based on data. We'll use an extra merge field to allow us to cope with the possibility that no filters are provided at all, and we don't need a WHERE clause.



          Next, we would build up a list of WHERE subclauses based on the passed information. For example, you might have something like this:



          List<String> whereClauses = new List<String>();

          if (nationality != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Nationality__c = :nationality');
          }
          if (school != null) {
          whereClauses.add('School__c = :school');
          }
          if (birthYear != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Birth_Year__c = :birthYear');
          }


          Then, once the list is complete, we can construct a final query and issue it dynamically:



          return Database.query(
          String.format(
          queryTemplate,
          new List<String> {
          whereClauses.size() > 0 ? 'WHERE' : '',
          String.join(whereClauses, ' OR ')
          }
          )
          );


          This keeps your logic flat, and avoids the combinatorial madness of trying to account for every possible combination of input parameters. It also - provided you issue the query in the same method or scope where you construct it - allows you to use Apex binds, so you avoid having to worry about type conversion and SOQL injection defense.



          I like to go so far as to dynamically construct my SELECT clause too, from a List<Schema.SobjectField>. That way, my code retains a static, compile-time reference to the field, and I get proper metadata dependency tracking. It also streamlines enforcement of FLS.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

            – BlondeSwan
            1 hour ago













          • Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

            – David Reed
            1 hour ago











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          This is a great opportunity to apply Dynamic SOQL. Here's one way to approach it.



          Start with a query template string, with placeholders for your dynamic entries:



          String queryTemplate = 'SELECT [your list of fields] FROM Student__c {1} {2}';


          We'll dynamically construct the content of the WHERE clause based on data. We'll use an extra merge field to allow us to cope with the possibility that no filters are provided at all, and we don't need a WHERE clause.



          Next, we would build up a list of WHERE subclauses based on the passed information. For example, you might have something like this:



          List<String> whereClauses = new List<String>();

          if (nationality != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Nationality__c = :nationality');
          }
          if (school != null) {
          whereClauses.add('School__c = :school');
          }
          if (birthYear != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Birth_Year__c = :birthYear');
          }


          Then, once the list is complete, we can construct a final query and issue it dynamically:



          return Database.query(
          String.format(
          queryTemplate,
          new List<String> {
          whereClauses.size() > 0 ? 'WHERE' : '',
          String.join(whereClauses, ' OR ')
          }
          )
          );


          This keeps your logic flat, and avoids the combinatorial madness of trying to account for every possible combination of input parameters. It also - provided you issue the query in the same method or scope where you construct it - allows you to use Apex binds, so you avoid having to worry about type conversion and SOQL injection defense.



          I like to go so far as to dynamically construct my SELECT clause too, from a List<Schema.SobjectField>. That way, my code retains a static, compile-time reference to the field, and I get proper metadata dependency tracking. It also streamlines enforcement of FLS.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

            – BlondeSwan
            1 hour ago













          • Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

            – David Reed
            1 hour ago
















          3














          This is a great opportunity to apply Dynamic SOQL. Here's one way to approach it.



          Start with a query template string, with placeholders for your dynamic entries:



          String queryTemplate = 'SELECT [your list of fields] FROM Student__c {1} {2}';


          We'll dynamically construct the content of the WHERE clause based on data. We'll use an extra merge field to allow us to cope with the possibility that no filters are provided at all, and we don't need a WHERE clause.



          Next, we would build up a list of WHERE subclauses based on the passed information. For example, you might have something like this:



          List<String> whereClauses = new List<String>();

          if (nationality != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Nationality__c = :nationality');
          }
          if (school != null) {
          whereClauses.add('School__c = :school');
          }
          if (birthYear != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Birth_Year__c = :birthYear');
          }


          Then, once the list is complete, we can construct a final query and issue it dynamically:



          return Database.query(
          String.format(
          queryTemplate,
          new List<String> {
          whereClauses.size() > 0 ? 'WHERE' : '',
          String.join(whereClauses, ' OR ')
          }
          )
          );


          This keeps your logic flat, and avoids the combinatorial madness of trying to account for every possible combination of input parameters. It also - provided you issue the query in the same method or scope where you construct it - allows you to use Apex binds, so you avoid having to worry about type conversion and SOQL injection defense.



          I like to go so far as to dynamically construct my SELECT clause too, from a List<Schema.SobjectField>. That way, my code retains a static, compile-time reference to the field, and I get proper metadata dependency tracking. It also streamlines enforcement of FLS.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

            – BlondeSwan
            1 hour ago













          • Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

            – David Reed
            1 hour ago














          3












          3








          3







          This is a great opportunity to apply Dynamic SOQL. Here's one way to approach it.



          Start with a query template string, with placeholders for your dynamic entries:



          String queryTemplate = 'SELECT [your list of fields] FROM Student__c {1} {2}';


          We'll dynamically construct the content of the WHERE clause based on data. We'll use an extra merge field to allow us to cope with the possibility that no filters are provided at all, and we don't need a WHERE clause.



          Next, we would build up a list of WHERE subclauses based on the passed information. For example, you might have something like this:



          List<String> whereClauses = new List<String>();

          if (nationality != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Nationality__c = :nationality');
          }
          if (school != null) {
          whereClauses.add('School__c = :school');
          }
          if (birthYear != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Birth_Year__c = :birthYear');
          }


          Then, once the list is complete, we can construct a final query and issue it dynamically:



          return Database.query(
          String.format(
          queryTemplate,
          new List<String> {
          whereClauses.size() > 0 ? 'WHERE' : '',
          String.join(whereClauses, ' OR ')
          }
          )
          );


          This keeps your logic flat, and avoids the combinatorial madness of trying to account for every possible combination of input parameters. It also - provided you issue the query in the same method or scope where you construct it - allows you to use Apex binds, so you avoid having to worry about type conversion and SOQL injection defense.



          I like to go so far as to dynamically construct my SELECT clause too, from a List<Schema.SobjectField>. That way, my code retains a static, compile-time reference to the field, and I get proper metadata dependency tracking. It also streamlines enforcement of FLS.






          share|improve this answer















          This is a great opportunity to apply Dynamic SOQL. Here's one way to approach it.



          Start with a query template string, with placeholders for your dynamic entries:



          String queryTemplate = 'SELECT [your list of fields] FROM Student__c {1} {2}';


          We'll dynamically construct the content of the WHERE clause based on data. We'll use an extra merge field to allow us to cope with the possibility that no filters are provided at all, and we don't need a WHERE clause.



          Next, we would build up a list of WHERE subclauses based on the passed information. For example, you might have something like this:



          List<String> whereClauses = new List<String>();

          if (nationality != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Nationality__c = :nationality');
          }
          if (school != null) {
          whereClauses.add('School__c = :school');
          }
          if (birthYear != null) {
          whereClauses.add('Birth_Year__c = :birthYear');
          }


          Then, once the list is complete, we can construct a final query and issue it dynamically:



          return Database.query(
          String.format(
          queryTemplate,
          new List<String> {
          whereClauses.size() > 0 ? 'WHERE' : '',
          String.join(whereClauses, ' OR ')
          }
          )
          );


          This keeps your logic flat, and avoids the combinatorial madness of trying to account for every possible combination of input parameters. It also - provided you issue the query in the same method or scope where you construct it - allows you to use Apex binds, so you avoid having to worry about type conversion and SOQL injection defense.



          I like to go so far as to dynamically construct my SELECT clause too, from a List<Schema.SobjectField>. That way, my code retains a static, compile-time reference to the field, and I get proper metadata dependency tracking. It also streamlines enforcement of FLS.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 1 hour ago

























          answered 1 hour ago









          David ReedDavid Reed

          36.8k82255




          36.8k82255













          • Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

            – BlondeSwan
            1 hour ago













          • Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

            – David Reed
            1 hour ago



















          • Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

            – BlondeSwan
            1 hour ago













          • Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

            – David Reed
            1 hour ago

















          Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

          – BlondeSwan
          1 hour ago







          Awesome! So if everything is null, the WHERE clause won't create an issue? Because if everything was null, wouldn't the query string end up being 'SELECT ... FROM Student__c WHERE ';

          – BlondeSwan
          1 hour ago















          Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

          – David Reed
          1 hour ago





          Ah, that's a good point, @BlondeSwan. Let me slightly amend my answer to cover the case where no filters are provided.

          – David Reed
          1 hour ago


















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