18

I'm trying to check if a find method returns a result. My find method is the following:

post = Post.find(:all, :conditions => { :url => params['url'] }, :limit => 1)

What would be a good way to check that post contains a result?

1

7 Answers 7

27

find :all returns an empty array ([]) if no rows are returned, so you can just use it this way:

post = Post.find(:all, :conditions => { :url => params['url'] }, :limit => 1)

unless post.empty?
  # do something...
end

By the way, if you do find :all you're going to get an array, not a single row. If you're trying to get just one Post, it would be cleaner to use the find_by helper or find :first or just first instead:

post = Post.find_by_url params['url']

# or

post = Post.first :conditions => { :url => params['url'] }

# then...

if post
  # do something...
end
1
  • 3
    One point of interest, if you just use find() with the primary key (not using :all or :first), it raises an exception if nothing was found. May 19, 2010 at 21:46
13

You can try ActiveRecord::Base.exists? before

Post.exists?(:conditions => { :url => params['url'] })
7

Use the BANG! version of the find_by_url method to get it to raise an exception of it could not be found and then rescue it later on in that same method/action.

def show
  Post.find_by_url!(params[:url])
  rescue ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound
    flash[:notice] = "The URL you were looking for could not be found."
    redirect_to root_path
  end
end

If you didn't raise an exception here I believe that Rails would show the public/404.html page.

1
4

if post doesn't contain any result it will be an empty list and then:

post.empty?

will return true.

2

it may be as simple as changing your finder to:

post = Post.find(:first, :conditions => { :url => params['url'] })

With this finder, post will either return a single value or nil. Because nil behaves like false in a condition statement, you can say something like the following:

if post
  # do something
else
  # do something else
end
1
Post.find_by_id(id_column_value)

will return nil rathering than blowing up your program when it can't find a record.

Of course, there's

x = Post.where(:any_column_name => value) 

which always returns an array of results. In which case you could just run an

x.each {|t| f(t) }

or

y = x.map {|t| f(t)}

or of course,

x[0], x[1], etc

Sorry I got a little carried away there

0

Another way to do it is checking with ActiveRecord#any?.

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