PDO is not good with such things. You need to create a string with placeholders dynamically and insert it into the query, while binding array values the usual way. With positional placeholders it would be like this:
$in = str_repeat('?,', count($in_array) - 1) . '?';
$sql = "SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE my_value IN ($in)";
$stm = $db->prepare($sql);
$stm->execute($in_array);
$data = $stm->fetchAll();
In case there are other placeholders in the query, you could use the following approach (the code is taken from my PDO tutorial):
You could use array_merge()
function to join all the variables into a single array, adding your other variables in the form of arrays, in the order they appear in your query:
$arr = [1,2,3];
$in = str_repeat('?,', count($arr) - 1) . '?';
$sql = "SELECT * FROM table WHERE foo=? AND column IN ($in) AND bar=? AND baz=?";
$stm = $db->prepare($sql);
$params = array_merge([$foo], $arr, [$bar, $baz]);
$stm->execute($params);
$data = $stm->fetchAll();
In case you are using named placeholders, the code would be a little more complex, as you have to create a sequence of the named placeholders, e.g. :id0,:id1,:id2
. So the code would be:
// other parameters that are going into query
$params = ["foo" => "foo", "bar" => "bar"];
$ids = [1,2,3];
$in = "";
$i = 0; // we are using an external counter
// because the actual array keys could be dangerous
foreach ($ids as $item)
{
$key = ":id".$i++;
$in .= ($in ? "," : "") . $key; // :id0,:id1,:id2
$in_params[$key] = $item; // collecting values into a key-value array
}
$sql = "SELECT * FROM table WHERE foo=:foo AND id IN ($in) AND bar=:bar";
$stm = $db->prepare($sql);
$stm->execute(array_merge($params,$in_params)); // just merge two arrays
$data = $stm->fetchAll();
Luckily, for the named placeholders we don’t have to follow the strict order, so we can merge our arrays in any order.