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I have setup this HABTM relationship in the past and it has worked before....Now it isn't and I'm at my wits end trying to figure out what's wrong. I've looked through the rails guides all day and can't seem to figure out what I'm doing wrong, so help would really be appreciated.

I have 2 models connected through a join model and I'm trying to find records based an attribute of the associated model.

Event.rb

has_and_belongs_to_many :interests

Interest.rb

has_and_belongs_to_many :events

and a join table migration that was created like:

create_table 'events_interests', :id => false do |t|
    t.column :event_id, :integer
    t.column :interest_id, :integer
end

I tried:

@events = Event.all(:include => :interest, :conditions => [" interest.id = ?", 4 ] )

But got the error:

"Association named 'interest' was not found; perhaps you misspelled it?"...

which I didn't off course.

I tried:

@events = Event.interests.find(:all, :conditions => [" interest.id = ?", 4 ] )

but got the error:

"undefined method `interests' for #Class:0x4383348"

How can I find the Events that have an interest id of 4....I'm definitely going bald from this lol

2 Answers 2

87

You need to include the interests table.

@events = Event.all(:include => :interests, :conditions => ["interests.id = ?", 4])

You had it right in your post, but you didn't pluralize interests.

Update

Because this answer is still getting attention, I thought it might be a good idea to update it using ActiveRecord::Relation syntax since the above way is going to be deprecated.

@events = Event.includes(:interests).where(interests: { id: 4 })

or

@events = Event.includes(:interests).where('interests.id' => 4)

And in case you want a custom condition

@events = Event.includes(:interests).where('interests.id >= 4')
1
  • #includes will pull all the "interests" objects. in case you want only to filter there is another method #joins, which will do only the filtering. Sep 13, 2019 at 15:58
7

The answer was helpful, thanks! I know this post is old, but I came up with a different solution that might be useful to someone. I noticed the query generate was quite long in my case. For me the table that was equatable to your "interests" table had a lot of columns and data in it. To avoid searching that table for the matching id, my solution looked similar to this:

@events = Event.all.where('events.id' => @interest.events.each(&:id)) 

This worked for me since I already had an instanced @interest object with the list of ids for the events. Of course you're not using some of the magic the rails has available. Also, I couldn't get your solution to work with "not". For example;

@events = Event.includes(:interests).where.not(interests: { id: 4 })

would not work. It would return 0 results. But this:

@events = Event.all.where.not('events.id' => @interest.events.each(&:id)) 

would work, which would return all the the events that don't have an association with @interest.

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