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I have made a workout application with with the following models:

user
routine
lifts
exercises
infos

A routine belongs to a user
A routine has many lifts (which is a joins between exercise and routine)

A lift belongs to an exercise
Infos(sets) belong to a lift

I am digging into ActiveRecord Queries and specifically includes to work on the n+1 problems I am having. When I show the entire routine which shows:

The routines name
The users name
The exercise names for each lift
The sets for each lift

If I want to make less queries can I simply load up everything such as in the following:
a = Routine.includes(:user, :lifts, :exercises, :infos) and loop through all of that to find what I want?

Or do I have to break it down more say:
a = Routine.includes(:user, :lifts)
b = Lift.includes(:exercise, :infos)
in order to shrink the amount of queries I have.

If this question is not clear enough please let me know.

1 Answer 1

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Something like the following should work. Routine.includes(:user, {:lifts => [:exercise, :infos]})

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  • Would you be able to explain what this is? To me it looks like it will load all the routines, the associated users, and every lifts' exercise and infos. Nov 20, 2013 at 22:37
  • There is way too much for me to explain, but there is plenty of info on the web. You should read through this guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html Nov 20, 2013 at 23:26

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