If I understand you correctly, you want the total number of comments by club and the total number of comments by club.
counter_cache will help you if you want to have quick answers for questions like:
- how many users a club has, or
- how many comments a user has, or
- how many posts a user has
but not with total number of posts or comments for each club (although it will make your live a little easier).
Disclaimer: Do not start implementing the following advices into production without creating a backup of your database and without reading the whole answer.
To make your script faster start by adding 2 columns to your clubs table:
class AddCommentsCountToClubs < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_column :clubs, :comments_count, :integer, default: 0
end
end
class AddPostsCountToClubs < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_column :clubs, :posts_count, :integer, default: 0
end
end
For each club:
- update comments_count to contain the number of comments added by users that belongs to the club
- update posts_count to contain the number of posts added by users that belongs to the club
To create a rake task that will update the counters, add a file lib/tasks/update_clubs_counters.rake
with the following content:
namespace :db do
task :update_clubs_counters => :environment do
Club.all.each do |club|
club.update(comments_count: club.comments.count, posts_count: club.posts.count)
end
end
end
After you create the file run bundle exec rake db:update_clubs_counters
Another way to update your counters is to use the rails console and to run the content of the task (only the part relevant to update)
Then, for Comment and Post models, add 2 callbacks to increment/decrement the counters from each corresponding club.
For clarity, I will define all the models involved and the relations between them
class Club < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :users
has_many :comments, through: :users
has_many :posts, through: :users
end
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :club
has_many :posts
end
class Comment < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :user
after_create :increment_club_comments_count
after_destroy :decrement_club_comments_count
def increment_club_comments_count
Club.increment_counter( :comments_count, user.club_id )
end
def decrement_club_comments_count
Club.decrement_counter( :comments_count, user.club_id )
end
end
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :user
after_create :increment_club_posts_count
after_destroy :decrement_club_posts_count
def increment_club_posts_count
Club.increment_counter( :posts_count, user.club_id )
end
def decrement_club_posts_count
Club.decrement_counter( :posts_count, user.club_id )
end
end
Now, every time a post/comment is added/deleted the corresponding counter from clubs table is incremented/decremented.
You can simplify your controller like this (with only one query you will have all your data):
@clubs = Club.all # I recommend to use pagination and not to list all 1000 clubs at once
In your view you simply display your counters like this:
<% @clubs.each do |club| %>
<p>Comments Count: <%= club.comments_count %></p>
<p>Posts Count: <%= club.posts_count %></p>
<% end %>
You can find more details about increment_counter and decrement_counter and counter_cache with has_many :through