9

I have a table with paginated data and this is the way I select data for each page:

@visitors = EventsVisitor
      .select('visitors.*, events_visitors.checked_in, events_visitors.checkin_date, events_visitors.source, events_visitors.id AS ticket_id')
      .joins(:visitor)
      .order(order)
      .where(:event_id => params[:event_id])
      .where(filter_search)
      .where(mode)
      .limit(limit)
      .offset(offset)

Also to build table pagination I need to know total count of records. Currently my solution for this is very rough:

total = EventsVisitor
      .select('count(*) as count, events_visitors.*')
      .joins(:visitor)
      .order(order)
      .where(:event_id => params[:event_id])
      .where(filter_search)
      .where(mode)
      .first()
      .count

So my question is as follows - What is the optimal ruby way to select limited data for the current page and total count of records?

I noticed that if I do @visitors.count - additional sql query will be generated:

SELECT COUNT(count_column) FROM (SELECT 1 AS count_column FROM `events_visitors` INNER JOIN `visitors` ON `visitors`.`id` = `events_visitors`.`visitor_id` WHERE `events_visitors`.`event_id` = 1 LIMIT 15 OFFSET 0) subquery_for_count 

First of all, I do not understand what is the reason to send an additional query to get a count of data that we already have, I mean that after we got data from database in @visitors we can count it with ruby without need to send additional queries to DB.

Second - I thought that maybe there are some ways to use something like .total_count that will generate similar count(*) query but without that useless limit/offset?

3
  • 1
    You don’t have to do another query to get the count of your query. See size vs. length vs. count. Jan 9, 2013 at 3:20
  • visitors.count return count of limited portion of data, i can't use it or size or length to get total count of records
    – SET001
    Jan 9, 2013 at 3:25
  • @Andrew Marshall - i understand, this is about why 2nd query is sent when calling count()
    – SET001
    Jan 9, 2013 at 3:29

1 Answer 1

15

you should except limit and offset http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html#except . See how kaminari does it https://github.com/kaminari/kaminari/blob/92052eedf047d65df71cc0021a9df9df1e2fc36e/lib/kaminari/models/active_record_relation_methods.rb#L11

So it might be something like

total = @visitors.except(:offset, :limit, :order).count
1
  • 2
    ruby is amazing
    – Mani
    Oct 29, 2016 at 18:53

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.