0

I have a Comment model which has-many attachments. What I want to return, is all of the comments which either have one or more attachment records, OR whose comment is longer than 250 characters.

Is there any way I can do this without writing it entirely in pure SQL? I'm struggling to build up a WHERE clause in just the rails method. It's not quite as simple as I'd hoped :(

Ideally I want this to be a scope but whatever will work is fine

3
  • 1
    While I don't have an answer to this question, I want to say that you shouldn't be afraid of SQL. It's the work horse of your app. AR is just a convenience wrapper on top of it. It's purpose is to simplify most common tasks. It is not meant to completely guard you from touching SQL. May 9, 2013 at 16:11
  • You can use the outer join and count the attachment records in addition to the condition of the comments length>250 May 9, 2013 at 16:11
  • @SergioTulentsev I'm not scared of it. I like using SQL I just tend to try avoiding it in Rails for portability but if there's no nicer way I guess I'll have to use it in this. AlexBell, That was my original thought, but I wasn't sure how to then get the record back as an AR instance as the count column doesn't exist
    – PaReeOhNos
    May 9, 2013 at 16:21

3 Answers 3

3

You could try:

Comment.includes(:attachments).where('attachments.comment_id IS NOT NULL OR LEN(comments.content) > 250')
2
  • Damnit! I did almost EXACTLY this, but forgot the IS keyword! Seems to work perfectly
    – PaReeOhNos
    May 9, 2013 at 16:28
  • Lots of answers work, but watch for performance. test my answers in irb and see sql generated
    – salah-1
    May 9, 2013 at 16:34
0

The WHERE clause should follow the pattern o the following pseudo-code

WHERE Length(Comment_field) > 250
OR EXISTS (Select COMMENT_ID from attachments)
0

Jump into the irb or rails c (console) do this from command-line to get it then plug it in.

 c     =  YourCommentModel.where('attachments > ?', 1)
len250 =  c = YourCommentModel.where('attachments.length> ?', 250)
first one gives comments of greater than 1, second gives comments > 250
1
  • Those are separate though. I'd then have to combine the results myself, as well as be running 2 queries. I'd rather just have the one query that does both
    – PaReeOhNos
    May 9, 2013 at 16:30

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.