You can delegate the query to a BasicObject
that proxies ActiveRecord::Relation
.
class QueryDelegator < BasicObject
def initialize(target)
@target = target
end
def method_missing(*args, &block)
result = target.send(*args, &block)
@target = result if result.kind_of? @target.class
result
end
end
What's happening here is that you are proxying method calls to your Delegator to the ActiveRecord::Relation that is returned with the call to scope. Then, if the methods your proxy are returning ActiveRecord::Relations, or subclasses thereof, if will assign that result to the delegate target.
Then you would do:
@orders = QueryDelegator.new(Order.unscoped.dated)
@orders.search_for(params["search"]) if params["search"].present?
@orders.where(:items_received_status => true) if params[:air].present? && params[:air] == 't'
@orders.tagged_with(params[:tags]) if params[:tags].present?
Or you could refactor even further and do:
class Order < ActiveRecord::Base
# ...
def self.search(params)
orders = query_builder(unscoped.dated)
orders.search_for(params["search"]) if params["search"].present?
orders.where(:items_received_status => true) if params[:air].present? && params[:air] == 't'
orders.tagged_with(params[:tags]) if params[:tags].present?
end
def self.query_builder(scope = nil)
scope ||= scoped
QueryDelegator.new(scope)
end
end
And then call your search in your controller like so:
Order.search(params)
Ryan Bates did a RailsCast on this pattern. Use at your own peril. As some commenters say, you may be sacrificing readability for only a little convenience.