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author | Pratik Naik <pratiknaik@gmail.com> | 2010-08-30 23:19:43 +0100 |
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committer | Pratik Naik <pratiknaik@gmail.com> | 2010-08-30 23:45:03 +0100 |
commit | 767eca491330d6ac1cd506a206e75664b60625c4 (patch) | |
tree | 31f934eea9acea5f7b3a005293e91a1f6804cd04 | |
parent | 1e554a11758fcbe6ffcd929d98c02cdac9a37bbc (diff) | |
download | rails-767eca491330d6ac1cd506a206e75664b60625c4.tar.gz rails-767eca491330d6ac1cd506a206e75664b60625c4.tar.bz2 rails-767eca491330d6ac1cd506a206e75664b60625c4.zip |
Remove {} from hash conditions. And more occurrences of [] in array conditions
-rw-r--r-- | railties/guides/source/active_record_querying.textile | 24 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/railties/guides/source/active_record_querying.textile b/railties/guides/source/active_record_querying.textile index 95d992bd3e..f93ff15a75 100644 --- a/railties/guides/source/active_record_querying.textile +++ b/railties/guides/source/active_record_querying.textile @@ -268,8 +268,8 @@ h5. Placeholder Conditions Similar to the +(?)+ replacement style of params, you can also specify keys/values hash in your array conditions: <ruby> -Client.where( - ["created_at >= :start_date AND created_at <= :end_date", { :start_date => params[:start_date], :end_date => params[:end_date] }]) +Client.where("created_at >= :start_date AND created_at <= :end_date", + {:start_date => params[:start_date], :end_date => params[:end_date]}) </ruby> This makes for clearer readability if you have a large number of variable conditions. @@ -279,8 +279,8 @@ h5(#array-range_conditions). Range Conditions If you're looking for a range inside of a table (for example, users created in a certain timeframe) you can use the conditions option coupled with the +IN+ SQL statement for this. If you had two dates coming in from a controller you could do something like this to look for a range: <ruby> -Client.where(["created_at IN (?)", - (params[:start_date].to_date)..(params[:end_date].to_date)]) +Client.where("created_at IN (?)", + (params[:start_date].to_date)..(params[:end_date].to_date)) </ruby> This would generate the proper query which is great for small ranges but not so good for larger ranges. For example if you pass in a range of date objects spanning a year that's 365 (or possibly 366, depending on the year) strings it will attempt to match your field against. @@ -301,8 +301,8 @@ h5. Time and Date Conditions Things can get *really* messy if you pass in Time objects as it will attempt to compare your field to *every second* in that range: <ruby> -Client.where(["created_at IN (?)", - (params[:start_date].to_date.to_time)..(params[:end_date].to_date.to_time)]) +Client.where("created_at IN (?)", + (params[:start_date].to_date.to_time)..(params[:end_date].to_date.to_time)) </ruby> <sql> @@ -323,14 +323,14 @@ In this example it would be better to use greater-than and less-than operators i <ruby> Client.where( - ["created_at > ? AND created_at < ?", params[:start_date], params[:end_date]]) + "created_at > ? AND created_at < ?", params[:start_date], params[:end_date]) </ruby> You can also use the greater-than-or-equal-to and less-than-or-equal-to like this: <ruby> Client.where( - ["created_at >= ? AND created_at <= ?", params[:start_date], params[:end_date]]) + "created_at >= ? AND created_at <= ?", params[:start_date], params[:end_date]) </ruby> Just like in Ruby. If you want a shorter syntax be sure to check out the "Hash Conditions":#hash-conditions section later on in the guide. @@ -344,13 +344,13 @@ NOTE: Only equality, range and subset checking are possible with Hash conditions h5. Equality Conditions <ruby> -Client.where({ :locked => true }) +Client.where(:locked => true) </ruby> The field name can also be a string: <ruby> -Client.where({ 'locked' => true }) +Client.where('locked' => true) </ruby> h5(#hash-range_conditions). Range Conditions @@ -358,7 +358,7 @@ h5(#hash-range_conditions). Range Conditions The good thing about this is that we can pass in a range for our fields without it generating a large query as shown in the preamble of this section. <ruby> -Client.where({ :created_at => (Time.now.midnight - 1.day)..Time.now.midnight}) +Client.where(:created_at => (Time.now.midnight - 1.day)..Time.now.midnight) </ruby> This will find all clients created yesterday by using a +BETWEEN+ SQL statement: @@ -374,7 +374,7 @@ h5. Subset Conditions If you want to find records using the +IN+ expression you can pass an array to the conditions hash: <ruby> -Client.where({ :orders_count => [1,3,5] }) +Client.where(:orders_count => [1,3,5]) </ruby> This code will generate SQL like this: |