106

This seems fairly simple but I can't get it to turn up on Google.

If I have:

class City < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :photos
end

class Photo < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :city
end

I want to find all cities that have no photos. I'd love to be able to call something like...

City.where( photos.empty? )

...but that doesn't exist. So, how do you do this kind of query?


Update: Having now found an answer to the original question, I'm curious, how do you construct the inverse?

IE: if I wanted to create these as scopes:

scope :without_photos, includes(:photos).where( :photos => {:city_id=>nil} )
scope :with_photos, ???
2
  • 5
    Since I discovered this question (stackoverflow.com/q/5319400/417872) I guess this can be closed. It's probably worthwhile to have one more way to find this in google though, this kind of thing is hard to describe and therefore hard to search for.
    – Andrew
    Mar 8, 2012 at 6:33
  • 13
    In Rails 4, you can use the new .not method for the inverse. City.includes(:photos).where.not( photos: {city_id: nil} )
    – XML Slayer
    Dec 1, 2014 at 22:17

6 Answers 6

140

Bah, found it here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/5570221/417872

City.includes(:photos).where(photos: { city_id: nil })
4
  • 1
    See also: stackoverflow.com/a/19080147/492465 - also answers your question about constructing the inverse and does all this with Arel Sep 29, 2013 at 16:06
  • 5
    I don't understand how this is correct? Isn't it looking for photos that don't have a city_id? That's not the same as cities for which there is no photo with that particular city's id as the foreign key.
    – sixty4bit
    Jul 2, 2015 at 1:33
  • 8
    @sixty4bit - It works because when you do includes it does a join. In a SQL join, you get all the fields of both tables (in this case cities and photos) for each row unless you change the projection of the query. So, he's using that to his advantage to check whether a required database identifier is present. If it's not, then there was no record on the photos side of the join. You could also use photos: {id: nil} if that is more clear. Dec 8, 2015 at 18:28
  • 1
    If you’re using Rails 6.1 or higher, use where.missing to find missing relationship records. E.g.City.where.missing(:photos)
    – Conor
    Nov 18, 2022 at 17:16
62

In Rails versions >= 5, to find all cities that have no photos, you can use left_outer_joins:

City.left_outer_joins(:photos).where(photos: {id: nil})

which will result in SQL like:

SELECT cities.*
FROM cities LEFT OUTER JOIN photos ON photos.city_id = city.id
WHERE photos.id IS NULL

Using includes:

City.includes(:photos).where(photos: {id: nil})

will have the same result, but will result in much uglier SQL like:

SELECT cities.id AS t0_r0, cities.attr1 AS t0_r1, cities.attr2 AS t0_r2, cities.created_at AS t0_r3, cities.updated_at AS t0_r4, photos.id AS t1_r0, photos.city_id AS t1_r1, photos.attr1 AS t1_r2, photos.attr2 AS t1_r3, photos.created_at AS t1_r4, photos.updated_at AS t1_r5
FROM cities LEFT OUTER JOIN photos ON photos.city_id = cities.id
WHERE photos.id IS NULL
2
  • What's the Rails 4 version of this?
    – fatuhoku
    May 19, 2017 at 14:47
  • @fatuhoku In Rails 4 you can either use Yossi's answer (for cleaner SQL) or use includes (for less brittle code). In Rails 5 left_outer_joins is the way.
    – TeWu
    May 23, 2017 at 17:08
24

When trying to find records with no matching records from the joined table, you need to use a LEFT OUTER JOIN

scope :with_photos, joins('LEFT OUTER JOIN photos ON cities.id = photos.city_id').group('cities.id').having('count(photos.id) > 0')
scope :without_photos, joins('LEFT OUTER JOIN photos ON cities.id = photos.city_id').group('cities.id').having('count(photos.id) = 0')
3
  • this is much slower compared the Andrew answer, but it works
    – brauliobo
    Oct 30, 2015 at 19:48
  • Actually I would say this is less complicated - this answer demonstrates the actual technique used, or the actual DB query that will be needed. The accepted answer essentially obfuscates this.
    – Todd
    Mar 23, 2016 at 14:55
  • 3
    If anyone else is wondering, LEFT OUTER JOIN is equivalent to LEFT JOIN
    – Daniel
    May 1, 2016 at 3:37
8

I used a join to get all the ones with photos:

scope :with_photos, -> { joins(:photos).distinct }

Easier to write and understand, for that particular case. I'm not sure what the efficiency is of doing a join vs doing an includes, though

1
  • adding to this way of doing it, to get all records that don't have an association: City.where.not(id: City.joins(:photos).distinct)
    – Mirror318
    Jul 16, 2020 at 21:03
1

I don't believe the accepted answer gives you exactly what you're looking for, as you want to do a LEFT OUTER JOIN and that answer will give you a INNER JOIN. At least in Rails 5 you can use:

scope :without_photos, left_joins(:photos).where( photos: {id: nil} )

or you can use merge in cases where namespacing will make the where clause cumbersome:

scope :without_photos, left_joins(:photos).merge( Photos.where(id: nil) )
1

If you are not running Rails 5+ and performance is a must-have, avoid useless ActiveRecord creation and get just what you need:

City.where("NOT EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM photos WHERE photos.city_id = cities.id LIMIT 1)")

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