I am passing an array of ids to a .where
in Rails, but the way it's returned doesn't preserve the order. For example, here's the array:
2.5.1 :043 > company_ids
=> [83, 79, 52, 44, 82]
I am looking for all pages that have those company IDs, but returned in the order of those company IDs that were provided. This is the result if I try to compare:
2.5.1 :044 > Page.where(company_id: company_ids).pluck(:company_id)
(1.1ms) SELECT "pages"."company_id" FROM "pages" WHERE "pages"."company_id" IN ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5) [["company_id", 83], ["company_id", 79], ["company_id", 52], ["company_id", 44], ["company_id", 82]]
=> [83, 82, 52, 44, 79]
I ran across this stackoverflow post (ActiveRecord.find(array_of_ids), preserving order) that seems to provide a solution, but it doesn't work for me. When trying to use Page.where(company_id: company_ids).order("field(company_id, #{company_ids.join ','})")
as suggested in the stackoverflow post, I get the following error:
2.5.1 :042 > Page.where(company_id: company_ids).order("field(company_id, #{company_ids.join ','})")
Page Load (2.0ms) SELECT "pages".* FROM "pages" WHERE "pages"."company_id" IN ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5) ORDER BY field(company_id, 83,79,52,44,82) LIMIT $6 [["company_id", 83], ["company_id", 79], ["company_id", 52], ["company_id", 44], ["company_id", 82], ["LIMIT", 11]]
Traceback (most recent call last):
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid (PG::UndefinedFunction: ERROR: function field(bigint, integer, integer, integer, integer, integer) does not exist)
LINE 1: ...ts"."company_id" IN ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5) ORDER BY field(comp...
^
HINT: No function matches the given name and argument types. You might need to add explicit type casts.
: SELECT "pages".* FROM "pages" WHERE "pages"."company_id" IN ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5) ORDER BY field(company_id, 83,79,52,44,82) LIMIT $6
I just simply want to call Pages.where(company_id: company_ids)
and get the pages back based on order of company_ids
that was provided.
As a workaround, I am using this:
company_ids = companies.order("full_name ASC").pluck(:id)
pages = []
company_ids.each {|c| pages << Page.find_by(company_id: c)}
but seems like that would be inefficient if there are thousands of records. or even just hundreds.