2

I have a video_votes table with all the votes with a column called value set to 1 or -1. I want to sum up all the values of the video's votes and display that net vote count. First, how should I sum this up, and second, should I store this value in my video table? If so, how?

4 Answers 4

7

I would start with this until performance became an issue:

class Video < AR::Base
  has_many :video_votes

  def vote_sum
    video_votes.sum(:value)
  end
end

class VideoVote < AR::Base
  belongs_to :video
  validates_inclusion_of :value, :in => [-1,1]
end

Once performance became an issue and I wanted to cache the summed value I might do something like this:

class Video < AR::Base
  has_many :video_votes

  # Override vote_sum attribute to get the db count if not stored in the db yet. 
  # The alternative is that you could remove this method and have the field
  # populated by a migration.
  def vote_sum
    read_attribute(:vote_sum) || video_votes.sum(:value)
  end
end

class VideoVote < AR::Base
  belongs_to :video
  validates_inclusion_of :value, :in => [-1,1]

  after_create :update_video_vote_sum

private

  def update_video_vote_sum
    video.update_attributes(:vote_sum => video.vote_sum + value)
  end
end

Check out the AR documentation on "Overwriting default accessors" (scroll down a bit) http://ar.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Base.html

7
  • I like this. What does read_attribute() do? I don't get the vote_sum method. Also, does it need to be @video.video_votes.sum('value')? Mar 18, 2011 at 2:55
  • read_attribute(:vote_sum) would read the vote_sum field in the video table. If it was nil it would then call the sum method on the relationship. In a view you would just do @video.vote_sum to get the sum. In the video vote class you then just update the sum in on the video object when a new vote is saved. Mar 18, 2011 at 3:05
  • You are in essence adding behavior to the vote_sum method defined by active record. You could also write a migration to populate the vote_sum field and remove that method. You could also start by not caching the vote sum until it becomes a performance issue. Will Update the answer with that strategy. Mar 18, 2011 at 3:22
  • by the way, does video_votes.sum(:value) in the vote_sum method make sure that it's only the rows that are associated with that particular video? Mar 18, 2011 at 3:26
  • 2
    Technically I should not go right ahead with caching, because it adds extra complexity. If votes can change, votes can be removed, it gets a tad more complex to keep the cached value in sync. But if that is not the case, and you know you will have a lot of votes, and a lot of views, then it might be worthwhile. But watch out for premature optimisation: doing effort that is actually never needed. Just keep it in mind for when it's actually needed.
    – nathanvda
    Mar 18, 2011 at 8:28
1

In your Video model:

def total_votes
  self.votes.sum(:value)
end

So an example might be:

@video.total_votes
1
  • Thanks. I assume I should call @video.total_votes as a callback in my video_votes model? Will it be able to reach the method in the Video model? Mar 18, 2011 at 2:46
0

Use ActiveRecord's sum method.

VideoVote.sum('value')

You shouldn't store it in the same table. If you have other fields you want to summarize then create a "summary" table and periodically summarize the fields and store the values there. ActiveRecord's other calculation methods might be of interest in that case.

0

I'm to sum 2 fields on the level a model:

  def update_sum_times
    update_attribute(:sum_of_fields, calc_two_dates)
  end

  def calc_two_dates
    date_one + date_two
  end

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