2

So far all the examples of queries I am coming across are geared towards a domain class such as:

Account.where, Account.withCriteria, Account.findxxxx but what if I want to query an instance's properties' properties? For example what if I have c a company instance that has a department d and I want to get a list of all the departments of this company instance that have 12 employees (a property of department) or less? What would be the code for such a query?

Something like:

c.findAllD's(such that d.numberOfEmployees <= 12)

Also, can anyone point me to literature on such instance based queries? I haven't been able to come across it.

2 Answers 2

1

The easiest approach would be to make the association bidirectional, i.e.

class Company {
  static hasMany = [departments:Department]
}

class Department {
  Company company
  int numberOfEmployees

  static belongsTo = [company:Company]
}

Then you can simply start your queries from the Department end, such as

def c = Company.get(...) // or however you obtain your Company instance
def departments = Department.findAllByCompanyAndNumberOfEmployeesLessThanEquals(c, 12)
5
  • Is the line Company company necessary in the Department class even though we have declared below it that a department belongs to a company? Wouldn't that declaration in itself hold the reference to the owner company of a department? I think it is for bidirectionality correct? Nov 23, 2014 at 16:50
  • @AnonymousHuman that line may indeed be redundant, but it doesn't do any harm to include it. Nov 23, 2014 at 16:54
  • I see, thanks. You used '12' as the argument to Company.get(12), why? Nov 23, 2014 at 16:55
  • @AnonymousHuman there was no significance to that choice, I've edited to make things clearer. Nov 23, 2014 at 16:58
  • I thought as much but just wanted to make sure. Thanks for clearing that up. Nov 23, 2014 at 23:24
1

looks like you want to use the Named Queries

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