4

Really been struggling trying to get a group by to work when I have to join to another table. I can get the group by to work when I don't join, but when I want to group by a column on the other table I start having problems.

Tables:
Book
id, category_id

Category
id, name

ActiveRecord schema:

class Category < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :books
end

class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :category
end

I am trying to get a group by on a count of categories. I.E. I want to know how many books are in each category.

I have tried numerous things, here is the latest,

books = Book.joins(:category).where(:select => 'count(books.id), Category.name', :group => 'Category.name')

I am looking to get something back like

[{:name => fiction, :count => 12}, {:name => non-fiction, :count => 4}]

Any ideas?

Thanks in advance!

2 Answers 2

2

How about this: Category.joins(:books).group("categories.id").count It should return an array of key/value pairs, where the key represents the category id, and the value represents the count of books associated with that category.

0
1

If you're just after the count of books in each category, the association methods you get from the has_many association may be enough (check out the Association Basics guide). You can get the number of books that belong to a particular category using

@category.books.size

If you wanted to build the array you described, you could build it yourself with something like:

array = Categories.all.map { |cat| { name: cat.name, count: cat.books.size } }

As an extra point, if you're likely to be looking up the number of books in a category frequently, you may also want to consider using a counter cache so getting the count of books in a category doesn't require an additional trip to the database. To do that, you'd need to make the following change in your books model:

# books.rb
belongs_to :category, counter_cache: true

And create a migration to add and initialize the column to be used by the counter cache:

class AddBooksCountToCategories < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def change
    add_column :categories, :books_count, :integer, default: 0, null: false

    Category.all.each do |cat|
      Category.reset_counters(cat.id, :books)
    end
  end
end

EDIT: After some experimentation, the following should give you close to what you want:

counts = Category.joins(:books).count(group: 'categories.name')

That will return a hash with the category name as keys and the counts as values. You could use .map { |k, v| { name: k, count: v } } to then get it to exactly the format you specified in your question.

I would keep an eye on something like that though -- once you have a large enough number of books, the join could slow things down somewhat. Using counter_cache will always be the most performant, and for a large enough number of books eager loading with two separate queries may also give you better performance (which was the reason eager loading using includes changed from using a joins to multiple queries in Rails 2.1).

4
  • isn't that making multiple trips to the DB (at least one for each category, maybe one more for the count)? Apr 17, 2013 at 13:48
  • To build the array? It depends on the code you use to pull the records from the DB. If you use counter_cache, you get everything in one hit (@categories = Category.all); without it, you could get everything in (probably) two calls by eager loading books (@categories = Category.includes(:books).all), although loading all the books could get pretty massive depending on the size of the table. With no eager loading and no counter_cache, @categories = Category.all would give you N+1 hits.
    – zkcro
    Apr 17, 2013 at 23:18
  • Even without the books count cache I should be able to do a count with a group by to get it in one query right? Which is what I was trying to do. Apr 18, 2013 at 1:24
  • A'ight, worked out how to do it the way you want, and updated my answer. I would still recomment counter_cache as the best way to implement this though, it will give you the best performance.
    – zkcro
    Apr 18, 2013 at 2:23

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