215

I'm trying to find all Users with an id greater than 200, but I'm having some trouble with the specific syntax.

User.where(:id > 200) 

and

User.where("? > 200", :id) 

have both failed.

Any suggestions?

10 Answers 10

340

Try this

User.where("id > ?", 200) 
4
  • 1
    Also check out Squeel gem from Ernie Miller
    – cpuguy83
    Jul 4, 2012 at 1:27
  • 7
    Is there any reason to prefer using ?, rather than inlining the 200?
    – davetapley
    Aug 22, 2014 at 22:48
  • 24
    it automatically escapes the 200 (were it possible for the user to enter the value, it avoids the possibility of SQL injection attacks) Nov 4, 2014 at 11:21
  • This will not work on joins when the id field needs to be referred to as user.id. Check Aaron's answer for a native AR solution. Jun 21, 2022 at 16:34
246

State of the Art

Ruby 2.7 introduced beginless ranges which makes specifying >, < and their inclusive cousins (>= and <=) even easier.

User.where(id: 200..).to_sql
  => "SELECT \"users\".* FROM \"users\" WHERE \"users\".\"id\" >= 200"
# There is no difference w/ a non-inclusive endless range (e.g. `200...`)

User.where(id: ..200).to_sql
  => "SELECT \"users\".* FROM \"users\" WHERE \"users\".\"id\" <= 200"
User.where(id: ...200).to_sql
  => "SELECT \"users\".* FROM \"users\" WHERE \"users\".\"id\" < 200"

This also works perfectly with timestamps!

User.where(created_at: 1.day.ago..).to_sql
  => "SELECT \"users\".* FROM \"users\" WHERE \"users\".\"created_at\" >= '2021-09-12 15:38:32.665061'"
User.where(created_at: ..1.day.ago).to_sql
  => "SELECT \"users\".* FROM \"users\" WHERE \"users\".\"created_at\" <= '2021-09-12 15:38:37.756870'"

Original Answer & Updates

I've only tested this in Rails 4 but there's an interesting way to use a range with a where hash to get this behavior.

User.where(id: 201..Float::INFINITY)

will generate the SQL

SELECT `users`.* FROM `users`  WHERE (`users`.`id` >= 201)

The same can be done for less than with -Float::INFINITY.

I just posted a similar question asking about doing this with dates here on SO.

>= vs >

To avoid people having to dig through and follow the comments conversation here are the highlights.

The method above only generates a >= query and not a >. There are many ways to handle this alternative.

For discrete numbers

You can use a number_you_want + 1 strategy like above where I'm interested in Users with id > 200 but actually look for id >= 201. This is fine for integers and numbers where you can increment by a single unit of interest.

If you have the number extracted into a well named constant this may be the easiest to read and understand at a glance.

Inverted logic

We can use the fact that x > y == !(x <= y) and use the where not chain.

User.where.not(id: -Float::INFINITY..200)

which generates the SQL

SELECT `users`.* FROM `users` WHERE (NOT (`users`.`id` <= 200))

This takes an extra second to read and reason about but will work for non discrete values or columns where you can't use the + 1 strategy.

Arel table

If you want to get fancy you can make use of the Arel::Table.

User.where(User.arel_table[:id].gt(200))

will generate the SQL

"SELECT `users`.* FROM `users` WHERE (`users`.`id` > 200)"

The specifics are as follows:

User.arel_table              #=> an Arel::Table instance for the User model / users table
User.arel_table[:id]         #=> an Arel::Attributes::Attribute for the id column
User.arel_table[:id].gt(200) #=> an Arel::Nodes::GreaterThan which can be passed to `where`

This approach will get you the exact SQL you're interested in however not many people use the Arel table directly and can find it messy and/or confusing. You and your team will know what's best for you.

Bonus

Starting in Rails 5 you can also do this with dates!

User.where(created_at: 3.days.ago..DateTime::Infinity.new)

will generate the SQL

SELECT `users`.* FROM `users` WHERE (`users`.`created_at` >= '2018-07-07 17:00:51')

Double Bonus

Once Ruby 2.6 is released (December 25, 2018) you'll be able to use the new infinite range syntax! Instead of 201..Float::INFINITY you'll be able to just write 201... More info in this blog post.

17
  • 2
    This answer is the best for Rails 4 IMO. Been using it for quite a while and works perfectly.
    – Nacho L.
    Sep 2, 2014 at 8:06
  • 4
    Why is this superior to the accepted answer, out of curiosity? Jan 27, 2015 at 19:18
  • 6
    Superior is misleading. In general you achieve more flexibility with your ARel queries if you're able to use the hash syntax over strings which is why many would prefer this solution. Depending on your project/team/organization you may want something that is easier for someone glancing at the code to figure out, which the accepted answer is.
    – Aaron
    Jan 28, 2015 at 17:48
  • 2
    I don't believe you can do that using the basic where matchers. For > I suggest using a >= (number_you_want + 1) for simplicity. If you really want to ensure it is just a > query you can access the ARel table. Every class that inherits from ActiveRecord has an arel_table getter method which returns the Arel::Table for that class. Columns on the table are accessed with the [] method like User.arel_table[:id]. This returns an Arel::Attributes::Attribute you can call gt on and pass in 200. This can be then passed to where. eg User.where(User.arel_table[:id].gt(200)).
    – Aaron
    Jun 8, 2015 at 17:43
  • 2
    @bluehallu can you provide an example? The following is not working for me User.where(created_at: 3.days.ago..DateTime::Infinity.new).
    – Aaron
    Apr 4, 2016 at 17:52
26

A better usage is to create a scope in the user model where(arel_table[:id].gt(id))

0
23

Update

Rails core team decided to revert this change for a while, in order to discuss it in more detail. See this comment and this PR for more info.

I am leaving my answer only for educational purposes.


new 'syntax' for comparison in Rails 6.1 (Reverted)

Rails 6.1 added a new 'syntax' for comparison operators in where conditions, for example:

Post.where('id >': 9)
Post.where('id >=': 9)
Post.where('id <': 3)
Post.where('id <=': 3)

So your query can be rewritten as follows:

User.where('id >': 200) 

Here is a link to PR where you can find more examples.

3
  • It's not quite clear whether this pull request will be accepted. According to (github.com/rails/rails/pull/39613#issuecomment-659553274)[this comment] the core team needs to discuss the issue first. Oct 13, 2020 at 15:41
  • @Fabian Winkler, thanks for your observation. I am monitoring this pull request. If something will change, I'll immediately update this answer.
    – Marian13
    Oct 17, 2020 at 0:02
  • Rails 7.03 and this doesnt seem to work. - where(end_at: ...Date.today).to_sql - will have to do Aug 2, 2022 at 19:49
11

Arel is your friend:

User.where(User.arel_table[:id].gt(200))
1
  • great response, we should prefer use arel =) Mar 9, 2021 at 21:29
7

Another fancy possibility is...

User.where("id > :id", id: 100)

This feature allows you to create more comprehensible queries if you want to replace in multiple places, for example...

User.where("id > :id OR number > :number AND employee_id = :employee", id: 100, number: 102, employee: 1205)

This has more meaning than having a lot of ? on the query...

User.where("id > ? OR number > ? AND employee_id = ?", 100, 102, 1205)
5

If you want a more intuitive writing, it exist a gem called squeel that will let you write your instruction like this:

User.where{id > 200}

Notice the 'brace' characters { } and id being just a text.

All you have to do is to add squeel to your Gemfile:

gem "squeel"

This might ease your life a lot when writing complex SQL statement in Ruby.

2
  • 12
    I recommend avoid using squeel. Long term is difficult to maintain and sometimes has odd behavior. Also it is buggy with certain Active Record versions Jul 26, 2016 at 16:05
  • I've been using squeel for some years and still happy with it. But Maybe it worth to try another ORM, like sequel (<> squeel) for instance, which seems promising nice features to replace ActiveRecord.
    – Douglas
    Jul 29, 2016 at 7:19
4

I often have this problem with date fields (where comparison operators are very common).

To elaborate further on Mihai's answer, which I believe is a solid approach.

To the models you can add scopes like this:

scope :updated_at_less_than, -> (date_param) { 
  where(arel_table[:updated_at].lt(date_param)) }

... and then in your controller, or wherever you are using your model:

result = MyModel.updated_at_less_than('01/01/2017')

... a more complex example with joins looks like this:

result = MyParentModel.joins(:my_model).
  merge(MyModel.updated_at_less_than('01/01/2017'))

A huge advantage of this approach is (a) it lets you compose your queries from different scopes and (b) avoids alias collisions when you join to the same table twice since arel_table will handle that part of the query generation.

3

For Ruby 2.6 can accept ranges like:

# => 2.6
User.where(id: 201..)
# < 2.6
User.where(id: 201..Float::INFINITY)
-3

Shorter:

User.where("id > 200")
1
  • 8
    I assume this has to be dynamic, and that the poster wants to avoid SQL injection by using parameterized queries (where("id > ?", 200) syntax). This doesn't achieve that. Sep 5, 2017 at 17:25

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