87

I have the following code:

@posts = Post.joins(:user).joins(:blog).select

which is meant to find all posts and return them and the associated users and blogs. However, users are optional which means that the INNER JOIN that :joins generates is not returning lots of records.

How do I use this to generate a LEFT OUTER JOIN instead?

1

8 Answers 8

114
@posts = Post.joins("LEFT OUTER JOIN users ON users.id = posts.user_id").
              joins(:blog).select
4
  • 3
    what if you only wanted the Posts which had no user?
    – mcr
    Aug 18, 2011 at 4:30
  • 24
    @mcr @posts = Post.joins("LEFT OUTER JOIN users ON users.id = posts.user_id").joins(:blog).where("users.id IS NULL").select Dec 1, 2011 at 23:15
  • 1
    Doesn't select need a param? Shouldn't this be select('posts.*')? Mar 26, 2015 at 20:08
  • In Rails 3, this is the only way to have true control over your joins and know exactly what's going on. Jan 29, 2018 at 16:26
75

You can do with this with includes as documented in the Rails guide:

Post.includes(:comments).where(comments: {visible: true})

Results in:

SELECT "posts"."id" AS t0_r0, ...
       "comments"."updated_at" AS t1_r5
FROM "posts" LEFT OUTER JOIN "comments" ON "comments"."post_id" = "posts"."id"
WHERE (comments.visible = 1)
6
  • 14
    From my tests includes does not do a join, but a seperate query to get the assosiation. So it avoids N+1, but not in the same way as a JOIN where the records are fetched in one query.
    – Kris
    Feb 19, 2013 at 11:53
  • 7
    @Kris You're right, in a way. It's something you need to watch out for because the includes function does both, depending on the context that you're using it in. The Rails guide explains it better than I could if you read the entirety of section 12: guides.rubyonrails.org/…
    – WuTangTan
    Feb 20, 2013 at 15:50
  • 4
    This only partly answers the question because includes will generate 2 queries instead of a JOIN if you don't have a need for the WHERE.
    – Rodrigue
    Jul 23, 2013 at 14:16
  • 14
    This will generate a warning in Rails 4 unless you also add references(:comments). Additionally, this will cause all returned comments to be eager loaded in memory due to the includes, which is possibly not what you want. Nov 30, 2013 at 1:58
  • 2
    To make this even more "Railsy": Post.includes(:comments).where(comments: {visible: true}). This way you also don't need to use references.
    – michael
    Aug 31, 2016 at 7:42
11

I'm a big fan of the squeel gem:

Post.joins{user.outer}.joins{blog}

It supports both inner and outer joins, as well as the ability to specify a class/type for polymorphic belongs_to relationships.

0
10

Use eager_load:

@posts = Post.eager_load(:user)
8

By default when you pass ActiveRecord::Base#joins a named association, it will perform an INNER JOIN. You'll have to pass a string representing your LEFT OUTER JOIN.

From the documentation:

:joins - Either an SQL fragment for additional joins like "LEFT JOIN comments ON comments.post_id = id" (rarely needed), named associations in the same form used for the :include option, which will perform an INNER JOIN on the associated table(s), or an array containing a mixture of both strings and named associations.

If the value is a string, then the records will be returned read-only since they will have attributes that do not correspond to the table‘s columns. Pass :readonly => false to override.

7

There is a left_outer_joins method in activerecord. You can use it like this:

@posts = Post.left_outer_joins(:user).joins(:blog).select
2
  • 1
    This doesn't seem to exist in Rails 3, which is what the poster is asking for.
    – cesoid
    Mar 30, 2017 at 14:08
  • Correct; this was introduced in Rails 5.0.0. Sep 15, 2017 at 16:18
4

Good news, Rails 5 now supports LEFT OUTER JOIN. Your query would now look like:

@posts = Post.left_outer_joins(:user, :blog)
0
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
     has_many :friends, :foreign_key=>"u_from",:class_name=>"Friend"
end

class Friend < ActiveRecord::Base
     belongs_to :user
end


friends = user.friends.where(:u_req_status=>2).joins("LEFT OUTER JOIN users ON users.u_id = friends.u_to").select("friend_id,u_from,u_to,u_first_name,u_last_name,u_email,u_fbid,u_twtid,u_picture_url,u_quote")

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