1

Expanding on recent_posts_on_self below, I want to add an all_recent_posts_on_self method but I'm not sure if it's possible using the syntax self.posts.find. On the other hand, all_recent_posts_on_class seems straightforward.

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :posts, :class_name => "Post" , :foreign_key => "author_id"
  has_many :comments, :class_name => "Comment", :foreign_key => "author_id"

  def recent_posts_on_class
    Post.find(  :all, :conditions => ['author_id = ?', self.id],
                :order => 'created_at asc', :limit => 5)
  end

  def recent_posts_on_self
    self.posts.find(:all, :order => 'created_at ASC', :limit => 5)
  end
end

In the example above, I have two ways of finding the recent blog posts that are associated with a user. I can call Post.find and pass it the author_id or I can call self.posts.find and I don't need to pass an author id. I assume this is because in the latter case, self.posts has already been limited based on the primary key of the user object and the has_many :posts associated with this user. This is an advantage in this case because I don't need to go to the trouble of passing author_id as an argument. But if I did not need to limit the query by author, would it be possible to create an all_recent_posts_on_self to do this?

What I'm talking about is an equivalent of this method (which omits the :conditions):

  def all_recent_posts_on_class
    Post.find(:all, :order => 'created_at asc', :limit => 5)
  end

But using self.posts.find instead of Post.find:

  def all_recent_posts_on_self
    self.posts.find(...)
  end

Also:

Even if it's possible to use self.posts.find to do this, is it "better" to use Post.find?

2 Answers 2

4

This isn't exactly what you asked, but I consider this helpful to know and following common patterns helps avoid complicated or confusing implementations.

The "Rails way" to do this is to use named scopes:

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :user
  named_scope :recent, :order => 'created_at desc', :limit => 5
end

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :posts
end

It doesn't get much more declarative and easy to read than this:

user.posts.recent # 5 most recent posts by the user
Post.recent # 5 most recent posts globally
1
  • That's really nice. Didn't know you could do that. Thanks. May 24, 2009 at 2:05
1

I'm not sure why you would want to use self.posts.find(..) to look for posts from other authors. This idiom is specifically for the purpose of finding a subset of the objects associated with the particular instance.

Post.find() is what you should use when you do not want limit to a particular User model. After all, the posts() method on the User object was merely a convenience that is effectively the same as (a cached) call to Post.find(:all, :conditions => ['author_id', self.id]).

2
  • Ok, I accept your logic as to why it makes sense to use Post.find() to look for posts from other authors. But is it even possible to look for posts from other authors through self.posts.find()? May 24, 2009 at 0:43
  • 1
    Not possible. Anything you do will just AND the query segments together. So you'll have "AND author_id = 5 AND author_id = 6". That's not likely to give you anything, unless you're using a RDMS I haven't heard of. :) May 24, 2009 at 1:37

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