I know that you can ask ActiveRecord to list tables in console using:
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.tables
Is there a command that would list the columns in a given table?
I know that you can ask ActiveRecord to list tables in console using:
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.tables
Is there a command that would list the columns in a given table?
This will list the column_names from a table
Model.column_names
e.g. User.column_names
Model.columns
to get more info about the columns including database config data.
Model.columns
provides all the information for a table through ActiveRecord. Crucially for me it was the only and easiest way to gain confidence in what my primary key really was at the database level.
This gets the columns, not just the column names and uses ActiveRecord::Base::Connection, so no models are necessary. Handy for quickly outputting the structure of a db.
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.tables.each do |table_name|
puts table_name
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.columns(table_name).each do |c|
puts "- #{c.name}: #{c.type} #{c.limit}"
end
end
Sample output: http://screencast.com/t/EsNlvJEqM
primary
attribute correctly (all columns have primary=nil
). It is set correctly with the Model.columns
method suggested by srt32.
Using rails three you can just type the model name:
> User
gives:
User(id: integer, name: string, email: string, etc...)
In rails four, you need to establish a connection first:
irb(main):001:0> User
=> User (call 'User.connection' to establish a connection)
irb(main):002:0> User.connection; nil #call nil to stop repl spitting out the connection object (long)
=> nil
irb(main):003:0> User
User(id: integer, name: string, email: string, etc...)
If you are comfortable with SQL commands, you can enter your app's folder and run rails db
, which is a brief form of rails dbconsole
. It will enter the shell of your database, whether it is sqlite or mysql.
Then, you can query the table columns using sql command like:
pragma table_info(your_table);
You can run rails dbconsole
in you command line tool to open sqlite console. Then type in .tables
to list all the tables and .fullschema
to get a list of all tables with column names and types.
complementing this useful information, for example using rails console o rails dbconsole:
Student is my Model, using rails console:
$ rails console
> Student.column_names
=> ["id", "name", "surname", "created_at", "updated_at"]
> Student
=> Student(id: integer, name: string, surname: string, created_at: datetime, updated_at: datetime)
Other option using SQLite through Rails:
$ rails dbconsole
sqlite> .help
sqlite> .table
ar_internal_metadata relatives schools
relationships schema_migrations students
sqlite> .schema students
CREATE TABLE "students" ("id" integer PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT NOT NULL, "name" varchar, "surname" varchar, "created_at" datetime NOT NULL, "updated_at" datetime NOT NULL);
Finally for more information.
sqlite> .help
Hope this helps!
To list the columns in a table I usually go with this:
Model.column_names.sort
.
i.e. Orders.column_names.sort
Sorting the column names makes it easy to find what you are looking for.
For more information on each of the columns use this:
Model.columns.map{|column| [column.name, column.sql_type]}.to_h
.
This will provide a nice hash. for example:
{
id => int(4),
created_at => datetime
}
For a more compact format, and less typing just:
Portfolio.column_types
I am using rails 6.1 and have built a simple rake task for this.
You can invoke this from the cli using rails db:list[users]
if you want a simple output with field names. If you want all the details then do rails db:list[users,1]
.
I constructed this from this question How to pass command line arguments to a rake task about passing command line arguments to rake tasks. I also built on @aaron-henderson's answer above.
# run like `rails db:list[users]`, `rails db:list[users,1]`, `RAILS_ENV=development rails db:list[users]` etc
namespace :db do
desc "list fields/details on a model"
task :list, [:model, :details] => [:environment] do |task, args|
model = args[:model]
if !args[:details].present?
model.camelize.constantize.column_names.each do |column_name|
puts column_name
end
else
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.tables.each do |table_name|
next if table_name != model.underscore.pluralize
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.columns(table_name).each do |c|
puts "Name: #{c.name} | Type: #{c.type} | Default: #{c.default} | Limit: #{c.limit} | Precision: #{c.precision} | Scale: #{c.scale} | Nullable: #{c.null} "
end
end
end
end
end