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).