title | category |
---|---|
Arel |
Rails |
users = Arel::Table.new(:users)
users = User.arel_table # ActiveRecord model
users[:name]
users[:id]
users.where(users[:name].eq('amy'))
# SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.name = 'amy'
users.project(users[:id])
# SELECT users.id FROM users
In ActiveRecord (without Arel), if :photos
is the name of the association, use joins
users.joins(:photos)
In Arel, if photos
is defined as the Arel table,
photos = Photo.arel_table
users.join(photos)
users.join(photos, Arel::Nodes::OuterJoin).on(users[:id].eq(photos[:user_id]))
users.joins(:photos).merge(Photo.where(published: true))
If the simpler version doesn't help and you want to add more SQL statements to it:
users.join(
users.join(photos, Arel::Nodes::OuterJoin)
.on(photos[:user_id].eq(users[:id]).and(photos[:published].eq(true)))
)
multiple joins
with the same table but different meanings and/or conditions
creators = User.arel_table.alias('creators')
updaters = User.arel_table.alias('updaters')
photos = Photo.arel_table
photos_with_credits = photos
.join(photos.join(creators, Arel::Nodes::OuterJoin).on(photos[:created_by_id].eq(creators[:id])))
.join(photos.join(updaters, Arel::Nodes::OuterJoin).on(photos[:assigned_id].eq(updaters[:id])))
.project(photos[:name], photos[:created_at], creators[:name].as('creator'), updaters[:name].as('editor'))
photos_with_credits.to_sql
# => "SELECT `photos`.`name`, `photos`.`created_at`, `creators`.`name` AS creator, `updaters`.`name` AS editor FROM `photos` INNER JOIN (SELECT FROM `photos` LEFT OUTER JOIN `users` `creators` ON `photos`.`created_by_id` = `creators`.`id`) INNER JOIN (SELECT FROM `photos` LEFT OUTER JOIN `users` `updaters` ON `photos`.`updated_by_id` = `updaters`.`id`)"
# after the request is done, you can use the attributes you named
# it's as if every Photo record you got has "creator" and "editor" fields, containing creator name and editor name
photos_with_credits.map{|x|
"#{photo.name} - copyright #{photo.created_at.year} #{photo.creator}, edited by #{photo.editor}"
}.join('; ')
users.take(5) # => SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 5
users.skip(4) # => SELECT * FROM users OFFSET 4
users.project(users[:age].sum) # .average .minimum .maximum
users.project(users[:id].count)
users.project(users[:id].count.as('user_count'))
users.order(users[:name])
users.order(users[:name], users[:age].desc)
users.reorder(users[:age])
User.arel_table
User.where(id: 1).arel
Most of the clever stuff should be in scopes, e.g. the code above could become:
photos_with_credits = Photo.with_creator.with_editor
You can store requests in variables then add SQL segments:
all_time = photos_with_credits.count
this_month = photos_with_credits.where(photos[:created_at].gteq(Date.today.beginning_of_month))
recent_photos = photos_with_credits.where(photos[:created_at].gteq(Date.today.beginning_of_month)).limit(5)