Yes, use it.
I did a few tests (with PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES false
) and I found out that the quotes around the values will be different.
When you bind an integer value with PARAM_INT
there will be no quotes in the query (A string value with PARAM_INT has quotes). If you bind an integer value with PDO::PARAM_STR
there will be quotes and mysql has to cast to integer.
Examples:
$stmt->bindParam(':ThreadId', $threadid, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$threadid = 123;
// SELECT TagId FROM tagthread WHERE ThreadId = 123
$threadid = '123test';
// SELECT TagId FROM tagthread WHERE ThreadId = '123test'
// mysql will cast 123test to 123
EDIT:
I further tested and read on that topic. Conclusion: Implicit casting is dangerous and can lead to unexpected results.
Read more on that here. Another disadvantage to always use PDO::PARAM_STR
is the performance. Read more on performance Disadvantages of quoting integers in a Mysql query?
So if your column is of type [TINY|SMALL|MEDIUM|BIG]INT
than use PARAM_INT
. And in case it is a LIMIT
clause than cast to integer if the variable type in PHP is not integer.
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