ActiveRecord::MultiConditions
MultiConditions is a simple ActiveRecord plugin for storing ActiveRecord query conditions and make complex queries painless.
Overview
This plugin doesn’t replace ActiveRecord#with_scope method, nor the basic :condition usage but extends it with the ability of storing illimitate conditions in multiple step.
conditions = MultiConditions.new
# ... do some elaboration
conditions.append_condition(['active = ? AND query LIKE ?', true, '%foo']
# ... other elaboration
conditions.append_condition(['name = ?', 'aname']
conditions.to_conditions
# => "active = true AND query LIKE '%foo' AND name = 'aname'"
Dependencies
-
Ruby 1.8.6
-
ActiveRecord 2.0 (or greater)
If you want to run the test suite:
-
sqlite3-ruby
Source
MultiConditions source code is managed via GIT and hosted at GitHub: github.com/weppos/activerecord-multiconditions/.
Download and Installation
Installing ActiveRecord MultiConditions as a GEM is probably the best and easiest way. You must have RubyGems installed for the following instruction to work:
$ sudo gem install activerecord-multiconditions
To install the library manually grab the source code from the website, navigate to the root library directory and enter:
$ sudo ruby setup.rb
If you need the latest development version you can download the source code from the GIT repositories listed above. Beware that the code might not as stable as the official release.
Usage
First, don’t forget to require the library.
gem 'activerecord-multiconditions'
require 'multi_conditions'
Now MultiConditions
object is automatically available as subclass of any ActiveRecord object.
class Task < ActiveRecord::Base; end
multiconditions = Task::Multiconditions.new
# => new instance
Create a new instance
As stated by the Important section above, you first need a valid ActiveRecord model to create a MultiConditions instance. Because MultiConditions helps you to deal with ActiveRecord queries, it’s easy to understand why you MUST establish a valid database connection and have at least one table (mapped with a Model) to query.
If you use ActiveRecord from Rails, this is just a matter of creating a new Model.
# create the Task model
class Task < ActiveRecord::Base
end
Now MultiConditions is automatically available within your Task namespace. You can use it in whatever class method, for example:
class Task < ActiveRecord::Base
def complex_search()
c = MultiConditions.new(:foo => 'bar')
Task.find(:all, c.to_conditions)
end
end
But you can also create a new instance from an other library, class or model. Just remember to initialize MultiConditions from its own namespace.
class Foo
class << self
def my_cool_conditions
Task::MultiConditions.new(:foo => 1).to_conditions
end
end
end
Foo.my_cool_conditions
# => 'foo = 1'
Appending conditions
You can append new conditions calling
-
#append_condition
-
#prepend_condition
and passing the conditions you want to append or prepend. See Condition Types section to lean more about supported objects.
conditions = MultiConditions.new
conditions.append_condition(['active = ? AND query LIKE ?', true, '%foo']
conditions.prepend_condition(['name = ?', 'aname']
conditions.to_conditions
# => "name = 'aname' AND active = true AND query LIKE '%foo'"
Condition types
The MultiConditions object accepts any type of conditions supported by ActiveRecord, including Strings, Arrays and Hashes, and merges them alltogether just before sending the final :condition value to ActiveRecord search method.
conditions = MultiConditions.new
conditions.append_conditions(:foo => 1, :bar => 2)
conditions.append_conditions('active = 1')
conditions.append_conditions(['name LIKE ?', '%foo'])
conditions.to_conditions
# => 'foo = 1 AND :bar = 2 AND active = 1 AND name LIKE '%foo'
See ActiveRecord::Base#find documentation for more conditions examples.
Important
Once loaded, this library become part of ActiveRecord package and creates its own namespace at ActiveRecord::Base::MultiConditions.
require 'multi_conditions'
For various reason, you cannot initialize a new ActiveRecord::Base::MultiConditions but you MUST initialize a MultiConditions instance from a Model.
# The wrong way
# raises Message: <"undefined method `abstract_class?' for Object:Class">
ActiveRecord::Base::MultiConditions.new
# The right way
class Model < ActiveRecord::Base
def a_method()
c = MultiConditions.new
find(:all, :conditions => c.to_conditions)
end
end
Author
If you like this software, please recommend me at Working with Rails.
Website and Project Home
FeedBack and Bug reports
Feel free to email Simone Carletti with any questions or feedback.
Please submit your bug reports to the Redmine installation for MultiConditions available at code.simonecarletti.com/activerecord-multiconditions.
Changelog
See CHANGELOG file.