18

How do I go about querying a date range (of say the last 30 days from now) with Mongoid and Ruby?

I need to end up with an array or hash like the following:

{
    15 => 300,
    14 => 23,
    13 => 23
    ...
    30 => 20  # Goes over into previous month
    28 => 2
}

I am currently storing each document with a DateTime instance as well as a unix timestamp Integer field.

The keys in the above hash are the days and the values are the sum of all sales for those days.

Any ideas?

0

5 Answers 5

34

There's a simpler way:

Sale.where(created_at: (30.days.ago..Time.now))

Adjust time range to suit.

8
  • This requires ActiveSupport for the .days.ago portion
    – Dan Healy
    Commented Mar 29, 2013 at 19:06
  • I don't think you can add multiple params with the hash syntax this way. Might be wrong though.
    – Ash Blue
    Commented Aug 6, 2013 at 20:04
  • @AshBlue - it's a single argument, of type Range. ruby-doc.org/core-2.0.0/Range.html Commented Sep 16, 2013 at 22:30
  • Range in ruby is very costly. Although nice syntax, I'd choose do the gte and lte
    – oma
    Commented Sep 17, 2013 at 16:20
  • @oma - could you give some info/link why ruby ranges are costly, especially in that context (mongodb query)?
    – mfittko
    Commented Mar 4, 2015 at 13:32
26

Here's how to do it all in rubyland:

sales_by_date = Hash.new(0)

Sale.where(:created_at.gte => (Date.today - 30)).order_by(:created_at, :desc).each do |s|
  sales_by_date[s.created_at.strftime("%m-%d")] += 1
end

This will create a hash with "month-day" keys, reason is that some months have fewer than 30 days and will result in a key collision if the query is always 30.

If you want a different range, change the query:

# Between 10 and 20 days ago
start_day       = 10
end_day         = 20

Sale.where(:created_at.gte => (Date.today - end_day), :created_at.lte => (Date.today - start_day))

Change created_at to whatever the name of your datetime field is.

4
  • If use 2012-06-16 instead of (Date.today - 30) then how write query?
    – harsh4u
    Commented Feb 7, 2013 at 10:31
  • @harsh4u: Convert the string to a Date object first. Date.parse("2012-06-16")
    – Dan Healy
    Commented Feb 7, 2013 at 17:13
  • this is far from perfect solution, the answers below are way better.
    – jturolla
    Commented Dec 19, 2014 at 17:39
  • Sale.where(:end_date.gte => (Date.today), :begin_date.lte => (Date.today)).order(begin_date: :desc)
    – Kiry Meas
    Commented Oct 16, 2017 at 15:47
6

You can also write the query by using the between method like:

Sale.between(created_at: (30.days.ago..Time.now))
2

What if you forgot to put timestamps in your model? :(

No problem! Just use the timestamp in the BSON:ObjectId

Get Sales in the last 30 days.

Sale.where(:id.gte => Moped::BSON::ObjectId.from_time((Date.today - 30).to_time))

Since the id field is index, this may very well be the fastest query.

Need a date range? Cake.

Get Sales from last month.

Sale.and(
  {:id.gte => Moped::BSON::ObjectId.from_time((Date.today.prev_month.beginning_of_month).to_time)},
  {:id.lte => Moped::BSON::ObjectId.from_time((Date.today.prev_month.end_of_month).to_time)}
)

Of course this example assumes Rails date helpers...

1
  • I think this is more better answer. It is more difficult but it have nice performance. Thank you!
    – ryush00
    Commented Jul 23, 2015 at 16:41
0

You can achieve this for example by doing a map_reduce call over your collection with a map function only emitting the relevant entries (the ones whose date value is greater than whatever condition you give it).

Try something like this:

map = "function () { emit( {this.date.getDate(), {}} )}"
reduce = "function (key, values) { return {date: key, count: values.length } }"

collection.map_reduce(map, reduce, {query: {"date": {"$gt": 30.days.ago } } })

That might work.

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