375

How can I select a random row using Eloquent or Fluent in Laravel framework?

I know that by using SQL, you can do order by RAND(). However, I would like to get the random row without doing a count on the number of records prior to the initial query.

Any ideas?

1
  • There is no best way to do this without executing at least two queries.
    – NARKOZ
    Dec 18, 2012 at 7:19

17 Answers 17

864

Laravel >= 5.2:

User::inRandomOrder()->get();

or to get the specific number of records

// 5 indicates the number of records
User::inRandomOrder()->limit(5)->get();
// get one random record
User::inRandomOrder()->first();

or using the random method for collections:

User::all()->random();
User::all()->random(10); // The amount of items you wish to receive

Laravel 4.2.7 - 5.1:

User::orderByRaw("RAND()")->get();

Laravel 4.0 - 4.2.6:

User::orderBy(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();

Laravel 3:

User::order_by(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();

Check this article on MySQL random rows. Laravel 5.2 supports this, for older version, there is no better solution then using RAW Queries.

edit 1: As mentioned by Double Gras, orderBy() doesn't allow anything else then ASC or DESC since this change. I updated my answer accordingly.

edit 2: Laravel 5.2 finally implements a wrapper function for this. It's called inRandomOrder().

11
  • 91
    Replace 'get' with 'first' if you want a single row. Feb 20, 2014 at 19:11
  • 16
    for PostgreSQL use 'RANDOM()'
    – dwenaus
    Nov 20, 2014 at 16:01
  • 4
    Warning: on large datasets this is very slow, adding around 900 ms for me
    – S..
    Jan 4, 2015 at 22:34
  • 3
    Can we paginate this? Sep 22, 2015 at 10:03
  • 3
    You can, however the sorting will be random on every new page. Which makes no sense because it's essentially the same as you press F5.
    – aebersold
    Sep 22, 2015 at 19:08
59

This works just fine,

$model=Model::all()->random(1)->first();

you can also change argument in random function to get more than one record.

Note: not recommended if you have huge data as this will fetch all rows first and then returns random value.

6
  • 80
    A performance-wise downside is that all the records are retrieved. Jul 21, 2014 at 23:20
  • 6
    here random is called on the collection object not the sql query. the random function is run on php side
    – astroanu
    Oct 15, 2015 at 6:13
  • @astroanu Right, but to populate that collection, all rows are queried.
    – MetalFrog
    Nov 14, 2015 at 1:08
  • 1
    I could be wrong, but this doesn't seem to work when the parameter passed to the random function is the same as the size of the collection. Jan 25, 2016 at 18:08
  • This is not good... This way you are retrieving all records and getting a random one. If your table has too many records this could be bad for your app. Jun 14, 2016 at 14:23
41

tl;dr: It's nowadays implemented into Laravel, see "edit 3" below.


Sadly, as of today there are some caveats with the ->orderBy(DB::raw('RAND()')) proposed solution:

  • It isn't DB-agnostic. e.g. SQLite and PostgreSQL use RANDOM()
  • Even worse, this solution isn't applicable anymore since this change:

    $direction = strtolower($direction) == 'asc' ? 'asc' : 'desc';


edit: Now you can use the orderByRaw() method: ->orderByRaw('RAND()'). However this is still not DB-agnostic.

FWIW, CodeIgniter implements a special RANDOM sorting direction, which is replaced with the correct grammar when building query. Also it seems to be fairly easy to implement. Looks like we have a candidate for improving Laravel :)

update: here is the issue about this on GitHub, and my pending pull request.


edit 2: Let's cut the chase. Since Laravel 5.1.18 you can add macros to the query builder:

use Illuminate\Database\Query\Builder;

Builder::macro('orderByRandom', function () {

    $randomFunctions = [
        'mysql'  => 'RAND()',
        'pgsql'  => 'RANDOM()',
        'sqlite' => 'RANDOM()',
        'sqlsrv' => 'NEWID()',
    ];

    $driver = $this->getConnection()->getDriverName();

    return $this->orderByRaw($randomFunctions[$driver]);
});

Usage:

User::where('active', 1)->orderByRandom()->limit(10)->get();

DB::table('users')->where('active', 1)->orderByRandom()->limit(10)->get();


edit 3: Finally! Since Laravel 5.2.33 (changelog, PR #13642) you can use the native method inRandomOrder():

User::where('active', 1)->inRandomOrder()->limit(10)->get();

DB::table('users')->where('active', 1)->inRandomOrder()->limit(10)->get();
2
  • You should change the 5.1 macro name to inRandomOrder so it's forward compatible ;) details, details :) Sep 16, 2016 at 12:34
  • That's precisely one thing I did while preparing a 5.1 project before migrating it to 5.2. Sep 16, 2016 at 21:15
30

You can use:

ModelName::inRandomOrder()->first();
24

it's very simple just check your laravel version

Laravel >= 5.2:

User::inRandomOrder()->get();
//or to get the specific number of records
// 5 indicates the number of records
User::inRandomOrder()->limit(5)->get();
// get one random record
User::inRandomOrder()->first();

or using the random method for collections:

User::all()->random();
User::all()->random(10); // The amount of items you wish to receive

Laravel 4.2.7 - 5.1:

 User::orderByRaw("RAND()")->get();

Laravel 4.0 - 4.2.6:

 User::orderBy(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();

Laravel 3:

 User::order_by(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();
19

In Laravel 4 and 5 the order_by is replaced by orderBy

So, it should be:

User::orderBy(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();
3
  • User::orderBy(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();
    – Darius
    Dec 2, 2013 at 22:16
  • 1
    It works thanks, but could you give some information how this works?
    – alayli
    Feb 16, 2014 at 10:16
  • Can you be a little more specific? What kind of information? Feb 17, 2014 at 0:33
11

For Laravel 5.2 >=

use the Eloquent method:

inRandomOrder()

The inRandomOrder method may be used to sort the query results randomly. For example, you may use this method to fetch a random user:

$randomUser = DB::table('users')
            ->inRandomOrder()
            ->first();

from docs: https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/queries#ordering-grouping-limit-and-offset

2
  • Course::inRandomOrder()->take(20)->get(); Not working for me - bad sort specification in Find.php line 219 Jan 29, 2019 at 7:02
  • 2
    This one's useful for model factories or db seeding Feb 10, 2019 at 23:33
9

You can also use order_by method with fluent and eloquent like as:

Posts::where_status(1)->order_by(DB::raw(''),DB::raw('RAND()')); 

This is a little bit weird usage, but works.

Edit: As @Alex said, this usage is cleaner and also works:

Posts::where_status(1)->order_by(DB::raw('RAND()'));
1
  • 3
    this works as well and is a little cleaner.. ->order_by(\DB::raw('RAND()'))
    – Alex Naspo
    Jan 24, 2013 at 13:34
4

Use Laravel function

ModelName::inRandomOrder()->first();
4

You can easily Use this command:

// Question : name of Model
// take 10 rows from DB In shuffle records...

$questions = Question::orderByRaw('RAND()')->take(10)->get();
1
  • for ORACLE DB orderByRaw('DBMS_RANDOM.RANDOM') Jun 7 at 8:04
3

There is also whereRaw('RAND()') which does the same, you can then chain ->get() or ->first() or even go crazy and add ->paginate(int).

3

Laravel has a built-in method to shuffle the order of the results.

Here is a quote from the documentation:

shuffle()

The shuffle method randomly shuffles the items in the collection:

$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);

$shuffled = $collection->shuffle();

$shuffled->all();

// [3, 2, 5, 1, 4] - (generated randomly)

You can see the documentation here.

2

At your model add this:

public function scopeRandomize($query, $limit = 3, $exclude = [])
{
    $query = $query->whereRaw('RAND()<(SELECT ((?/COUNT(*))*10) FROM `products`)', [$limit])->orderByRaw('RAND()')->limit($limit);
    if (!empty($exclude)) {
        $query = $query->whereNotIn('id', $exclude);
    }
    return $query;
}

then at route/controller

$data = YourModel::randomize(8)->get();
2

I prefer to specify first or fail:

$collection = YourModelName::inRandomOrder()
  ->firstOrFail();
2

Here's how I get random results in eloquent in one of my projects:

$products           =  Product::inRandomOrder()->limit(10);

10 - The number of random records to pull.

1
1

I have table with thousands of records, so I need something fast. This is my code for pseudo random row:

// count all rows with flag active = 1
$count = MyModel::where('active', '=', '1')->count(); 

// get random id
$random_id = rand(1, $count - 1);  

// get first record after random id
$data = MyModel::where('active', '=', '1')->where('id', '>', $random_id)->take(1)->first(); 
1
  • The problem with this is that if there are multiple rows with ids greater than $count only the first of these would ever be retrieved, and so it would also be more likely to be retrieved than any other row.
    – kemika
    Sep 5, 2017 at 23:27
0

Try this code! It Works:

  User::orderBy(DB::raw('RAND()'))->get();
1
  • 1
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