As of Rails 4, you would do:
class Article < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :comments, -> { order(created_at: :desc) }
end
class Comment < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :article
end
For a has_many :through
relationship the argument order matters (it has to be second):
class Article
has_many :comments, -> { order('postables.sort' :desc) },
:through => :postable
end
If you will always want to access comments in the same order no matter the context you could also do this via default_scope
within Comment
like:
class Comment < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :article
default_scope { order(created_at: :desc) }
end
However this can be problematic for the reasons discussed in this question.
Before Rails 4 you could specify order
as a key on the relationship, like:
class Article < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :comments, :order => 'created_at DESC'
end
As Jim mentioned you can also use sort_by
after you have fetched results although in any result sets of size this will be significantly slower (and use a lot more memory) than doing your ordering through SQL/ActiveRecord.
If you are doing something where adding a default order is cumbersome for some reason or you want to override your default in certain cases, it is trivial to specify it in the fetching action itself:
sorted = article.comments.order('created_at').all