54

I have a query to get the IDs of people in a particular order, say: ids = [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]

I then want to fetch those people by Person.find(ids)

But they are always fetched in numerical order, I know this by performing:

people = Person.find(ids).map(&:id)
 => [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 9]

How can I run this query so that the order is the same as the order of the ids array?

I made this task more difficult as I wanted to only perform the query to fetch people once, from the IDs given. So, performing multiple queries is out of the question.

I tried something like:

ids.each do |i|
  person = people.where('id = ?', i)

But I don't think this works.

2
  • Rails 7 solution here: hashrocket.com/blog/posts/…
    – dezman
    Sep 12, 2022 at 22:54
  • 1
    As of Rails 5, find returns the records in the same order as the ids provided (docs, issue). The method in_order_of added in Rails 7 is only needed when using where.
    – tom
    Feb 8, 2023 at 14:01

14 Answers 14

39

Editor's note:
As of Rails 5, find returns the records in the same order as the provided IDs (docs).

Note on this code:

ids.each do |i|
  person = people.where('id = ?', i)

There are two issues with it:

First, the #each method returns the array it iterated on, so you'd just get the ids back. What you want is a collect

Second, the where will return an Arel::Relation object, which in the end will evaluate as an array. So you'd end up with an array of arrays. You could fix two ways.

The first way would be by flattening:

ids.collect {|i| Person.where('id => ?', i) }.flatten

Even better version:

ids.collect {|i| Person.where(:id => i) }.flatten

A second way would by to simply do a find:

ids.collect {|i| Person.find(i) }

That's nice and simple

You'll find, however, that these all do a query for each iteration, so not very efficient.

I like Sergio's solution, but here's another I would have suggested:

people_by_id = Person.find(ids).index_by(&:id) # Gives you a hash indexed by ID
ids.collect {|id| people_by_id[id] }

I swear that I remember that ActiveRecord used to do this ID ordering for us. Maybe it went away with Arel ;)

7
  • 1
    Just tried it in an old 2.3.8 project that I had and it turns out the find method doesn't order by the IDs automatically. I must be getting old... ;) Apr 14, 2012 at 1:57
  • Could you explain your altered suggestion a little? At what point can this then be used to iterate through the new people result in the correct order? Or did you comment because it wasn't working? Thank you for your input though, I found it very useful
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 6:39
  • I've tried your solution and it's benchmarking slightly faster than any other solution here, thanks!
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 7:20
  • 1
    I probably should have been clearer that you can take the second line and assign it or further iterate upon it. I also probably should have started with my alternate solution, though I like starting from a bit of code and showing incremental changes until a more ideal solution is reached ;) Apr 15, 2012 at 12:31
  • 1
    index_by is great but watch out if you receive your array filled with ids by HTTP. Spend nearly an hour to realise that ["1", "2", "3"] != [1, 2, 3]. Feb 13, 2014 at 20:20
16

As I see it, you can either map the IDs or sort the result. For the latter, there already are solutions, though I find them inefficient.

Mapping the IDs:

ids = [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]
people_in_order = ids.map { |id| Person.find(id) }

Note that this will cause multiple queries to be executed, which is potentially inefficient.

Sorting the result:

ids = [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]
id_indices = Hash[ids.map.with_index { |id,idx| [id,idx] }] # requires ruby 1.8.7+
people_in_order = Person.find(ids).sort_by { |person| id_indices[person.id] }

Or, expanding on Brian Underwoods answer:

ids = [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]
indexed_people = Person.find(ids).index_by(&:id) # I didn't know this method, TIL :)
people_in_order = indexed_people.values_at(*ids)

Hope that helps

5
  • Thank you, I tried your expanded answer which works - is this your preferred solution?
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 6:49
  • I haven't used index_by yet, but assuming it doesn't come with some inexplicably high performance penalty, then yes. It's quite concise in my opinion.
    – apeiros
    Apr 14, 2012 at 8:33
  • Actually it seemed to be one of the faster solutions here - but each solution was very closely timed, I didn't test your first solution though - I'd have to take your word on whether or not you feel it would be more efficient
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 8:40
  • 1
    As I say in the answer, the first solution is probably quite slow due to the overhead of using multiple queries. For small number of ids, that shouldn't matter. But my preference is on the third.
    – apeiros
    Apr 14, 2012 at 8:46
  • The last alternative works for me - Using Mongoid. Dec 18, 2020 at 21:44
14

If you have ids array then it is as simple as - Person.where(id: ids).sort_by {|p| ids.index(p.id) } OR

persons = Hash[ Person.where(id: ids).map {|p| [p.id, p] }] ids.map {|i| persons[i] }

10

With Rails 5, I've found that this approach works (with postgres, at least), even for scoped queries, useful for working with ElasticSearch:

Person.where(country: "France").find([3, 2, 1]).map(&:id)
=> [3, 2, 1]

Note that using where instead of find does not preserve the order.

Person.where(country: "France").where(id: [3, 2, 1]).map(&:id)
=> [1, 2, 3]
2
  • Using find instead of where does the trick. Thank you a lot!
    – Yunus Emre
    Aug 17, 2020 at 14:41
  • This works however, if the passed id is not present it will thrown an exception
    – bragboy
    Jun 25, 2021 at 22:06
8

You can get users sorted by id asc from the database and then rearrange them in the application any way you want. Check this out:

ids = [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]
users = ids.sort.map {|i| {id: i}} # Or User.find(ids) or another query

# users sorted by id asc (from the query)
users # => [{:id=>1}, {:id=>2}, {:id=>3}, {:id=>5}, {:id=>6}, {:id=>9}]

users.sort_by! {|u| ids.index u[:id]} 

# users sorted as you wanted
users # => [{:id=>1}, {:id=>3}, {:id=>5}, {:id=>9}, {:id=>6}, {:id=>2}]

The trick here is sorting the array by an artificial value: index of object's id in another array.

7
  • Just getting some sleep, will try this in the morning, thanks!
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 1:27
  • Could you elaborate on your answer for me please? I can see that it works but, not sure how to use it with a result of people, with names, emails, etc.
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 6:45
  • 1
    Yeah, sure. The key line is the one with sort_by!. You provide a block that is then called with an instance of user. You extract an id from this object, find position of this id in your original id array, and this position will also be position of user object in the sorted array. User with id=5 will come third because ids array has 3 at third position. Apr 14, 2012 at 6:51
  • So at what point would you do something like users = User.find_all_by_id(ids) to get the actual set to work with to be sorted?
    – Jonathan
    Apr 14, 2012 at 7:06
  • 2
    No problem. Pick the best answer :) Apr 14, 2012 at 7:28
8

There are two ways to get entries by given an array of ids. If you are working on Rails 4, dynamic method are deprecated, you need to look at the Rails 4 specific solution below.

Solution one:

Person.find([1,2,3,4])

This will raise ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound if no record exists

Solution two [Rails 3 only]:

Person.find_all_by_id([1,2,3,4])

This will not cause exception, simply return empty array if no record matches your query.

Based on your requirement choosing the method you would like to use above, then sorting them by given ids

ids = [1,2,3,4]
people = Person.find_all_by_id(ids)
# alternatively: people = Person.find(ids)
ordered_people = ids.collect {|id| people.detect {|x| x.id == id}}

Solution [Rails 4 only]:

I think Rails 4 offers a better solution.

# without eager loading
Person.where(id: [1,2,3,4]).order('id DESC')

# with eager loading.
# Note that you can not call deprecated `all`
Person.where(id: [1,2,3,4]).order('id DESC').load
2
  • 27
    The Rails 4 solution doesn't answer the question. You are ordering by the numerical value of the id. That is how Rails does it by default.
    – d_rail
    May 21, 2015 at 17:20
  • 9
    The question asked how to order ids in the way they were passed in... not by a default ASC or DESC
    – courtsimas
    Jul 14, 2015 at 17:17
8

I here summarise the solutions, plus adding recent (9.4+) PostgreSQL-specific solution. The following is based on Rails 6.1 and PostgreSQL 12. Though I mention solutions for earlier versions of Rails and PostgreSQL, I haven't actually tested them with earlier versions.

For reference, this question "ORDER BY the IN value list" gives various ways of sorting/ordering with the database.

Here, I assume the model is guaranteed to have all the records specified by the Array of IDs, ids. Otherwise, an exception like ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound may be raised (or may not, depending on the way).

What does NOT work

Person.where(id: ids)

The order of the returned Relation is either arbitrary or that of the numerical values of the primary IDs; whichever, it usually does not agree with that of ids.

Simple solution to get an Array

(Rails 5+ only(?))

Person.find ids

which returns a Ruby Array of Person models in the order of the given ids.

A downside is you cannot further modify the result with SQL.

In Rails 3, the following is the way apparently, though this may not work (certainly does not in Rails 6) in the other versions of Rails.

Person.find_all_by_id ids

Pure Ruby solution to get an Array

Two ways. Either works regardless of Rails versions (I think).

Person.where(id: ids).sort_by{|i| ids.index(i.id)}
Person.where(id: ids).index_by(&:id).values_at(*ids)

which returns a Ruby Array of Person models in the order of the given ids.

DB-level solution to get a Relation

All of the following return Person::ActiveRecord_Relation, to which you can apply more filters if you like.

In the following solutions, all records are preserved, including those whose IDs are not included in the given array ids. You can filter them out any time by adding where(id: ids) (this sort of flexibility is a beauty of ActiveRecord_Relation).

For any Database

Based on user3033467's answer but updated to work with Rails 6 (which has disabled some features with order() due to a security concern; see "Updates for SQL Injection in Rails 6.1" by Justin for the background).

order_query = <<-SQL
  CASE musics.id 
    #{ids.map.with_index { |id, index| "WHEN #{id} THEN #{index}" } .join(' ')}
    ELSE #{ids.length}
  END
SQL

Person.order(Arel.sql(order_query))

For MySQL specific

From Koen's answer (I haven't tested it).

Person.order(Person.send(:sanitize_sql_array, ['FIELD(id, ?)', ids])).find(ids)

For PostgreSQL specific

PostgreSQL 9.4+

join_sql = "INNER JOIN unnest('{#{ids.join(',')}}'::int[]) WITH ORDINALITY t(id, ord) USING (id)"
Person.joins(join_sql).order("t.ord")

PostgreSQL 8.2+

Based on Jerph's answer, but LEFT JOIN is replaced with INNER JOIN:

val_ids = ids.map.with_index.map{|id, i| "(#{id}, #{i})"}.join(", ")
Person.joins("INNER JOIN (VALUES #{val_ids}) AS persons_id_order(id, ordering) ON persons.id = persons_id_order.id")
  .order("persons_id_order.ordering")

To get lower-level objects

The following is solutions to get lower-level objects. In a vast majority of cases, the solutions described above must be superior to these, but am putting there here for the sake of completeness (and record before I found better solutions)…

In the following solutions, the records that do not match IDs in ids are filtered out, unlike the solutions described in the previous section (where all records can be chosen to be preserved).

To get an ActiveRecord::Result

This is a solution to get ActiveRecord::Result with PostgreSQL 9.4+.

ActiveRecord::Result is similar to an Array of Hash.

str_sql = "select persons.* from persons INNER JOIN unnest('{#{ids.join(',')}}'::int[]) WITH ORDINALITY t(id, ord) USING (id) ORDER BY t.ord;"
Person.connection.select_all(str_sql)

Person.connection.exec_query returns the same (alias?).

To get a PG::Result

This is a solution to get PG::Result with PostgreSQL 9.4+. Very similar to above, but replace exec_query with execute (the first line is identical to the solution above):

str_sql = "select persons.* from persons INNER JOIN unnest('{#{ids.join(',')}}'::int[]) WITH ORDINALITY t(id, ord) USING (id) ORDER BY t.ord;"
Person.connection.execute(str_sql)
6

Old question, but the sorting can be done by ordering using the SQL FIELD function. (Only tested this with MySQL.)

So in this case something like this should work:

Person.order(Person.send(:sanitize_sql_array, ['FIELD(id, ?)', ids])).find(ids)

Which results in the following SQL:

SELECT * FROM people
  WHERE id IN (1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2)
  ORDER BY FIELD(id, 1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2)
5

Most of the other solutions don't allow you to further filter the resulting query, which is why I like Koen's answer.

Similar to that answer but for Postgres, I add this function to my ApplicationRecord (Rails 5+) or to any model (Rails 4):

def self.order_by_id_list(id_list)
  values_clause = id_list.each_with_index.map{|id, i| "(#{id}, #{i})"}.join(", ")
  joins("LEFT JOIN (VALUES #{ values_clause }) AS #{ self.table_name}_id_order(id, ordering) ON #{ self.table_name }.id = #{ self.table_name }_id_order.id")
    .order("#{ self.table_name }_id_order.ordering")
end

The query solution is from this question.

2
  • Great answer! This is exactly what I was looking for, thanks! :)
    – Szymon Rut
    Nov 20, 2017 at 9:08
  • You'll need to replace LEFT JOIN with JOIN to match the original query so that this method works as expected.
    – mrcasals
    Nov 22, 2018 at 9:14
3

This is most efficiently handled in SQL via ActiveRecord and not in Ruby.

ids = [3,1,6,7,12,2]
Post.where(id: ids).order("FIELD(id, #{ids.join(',')})")
0

This simple solution costs less than joining on values:

order_query = <<-SQL
  CASE persons.id 
    #{ids.map.with_index { |id, index| "WHEN #{id} THEN #{index}" } .join(' ')}
    ELSE #{ids.length}
  END
SQL
Person.where(id: ids).order(order_query)
1
  • +1 for this should potentially work regardless of the database. But I find a modification with Arel() is essential for Rails 6.1 as order(Arel.sql(order_query)) Aug 31, 2021 at 10:36
0

I tried the answers recommending the FIELD method on Rails6 but was encountering errors. However, I discovered that all one has to do is wrap the sql in Arel.sql().

# Make sure it's a known-safe values.
user_ids = [3, 2, 1]
# Before 
users = User.where(id: user_ids).order("FIELD(id, 2, 3, 1)")
# With warning.

# After 
users = User.where(id: user_ids).order(Arel.sql("FIELD(id, 2, 3, 1)"))
# No warning

[1] https://medium.com/@mitsun.chieh/activerecord-relation-with-raw-sql-argument-returns-a-warning-exception-raising-8999f1b9898a

0

Use find:

Thing.find([4, 2, 6])

For Rails 7:

Thing.where(id: [4, 2, 6]).in_order_of(:id, [4, 2, 6])

See https://hashrocket.com/blog/posts/return-results-using-a-specific-order-in-rails

-1

To get the IDs of people in a particular order, say: ids = [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]

In older version of rails, find and where fetch data in numerical order, but rails 5 fetch data in the same order in which you query it

Note: find preserve the order and where don't preserve it

Person.find(ids).map(&:id)
=> [1, 3, 5, 9, 6, 2]

Person.where(id: ids).map(&:id)
=> [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 9] 

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