Calculates the average value on a given column. Returns nil
if
there's no row. See calculate
for examples with options.
Person.average('age') # => 35.8
This calculates aggregate values in the given column. Methods for count, sum, average, minimum, and maximum have been added as shortcuts.
There are two basic forms of output:
* Single aggregate value: The single value is type cast to Fixnum for COUNT, Float
for AVG, and the given column's type for everything else.
* Grouped values: This returns an ordered hash of the values and groups them. It
takes either a column name, or the name of a belongs_to association.
values = Person.group('last_name').maximum(:age)
puts values["Drake"]
# => 43
drake = Family.find_by(last_name: 'Drake')
values = Person.group(:family).maximum(:age) # Person belongs_to :family
puts values[drake]
# => 43
values.each do |family, max_age|
...
end
Person.calculate(:count, :all) # The same as Person.count
Person.average(:age) # SELECT AVG(age) FROM people...
# Selects the minimum age for any family without any minors
Person.group(:last_name).having("min(age) > 17").minimum(:age)
Person.sum("2 * age")
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/calculations.rb, line 101 def calculate(operation, column_name, options = {}) relation = with_default_scope if relation.equal?(self) if has_include?(column_name) construct_relation_for_association_calculations.calculate(operation, column_name, options) else perform_calculation(operation, column_name, options) end else relation.calculate(operation, column_name, options) end rescue ThrowResult 0 end
Count the records.
Person.count
# => the total count of all people
Person.count(:age)
# => returns the total count of all people whose age is present in database
Person.count(:all)
# => performs a COUNT(*) (:all is an alias for '*')
Person.distinct.count(:age)
# => counts the number of different age values
If count
is used with group
, it returns a Hash
whose keys represent the aggregated column, and the values are the
respective amounts:
Person.group(:city).count
# => { 'Rome' => 5, 'Paris' => 3 }
Pluck all the ID's for the relation using the table's primary key
Person.ids # SELECT people.id FROM people
Person.joins(:companies).ids # SELECT people.id FROM people INNER JOIN companies ON companies.person_id = people.id
Calculates the maximum value on a given column. The value is returned with
the same data type of the column, or nil
if there's no
row. See calculate
for examples with options.
Person.maximum('age') # => 93
Calculates the minimum value on a given column. The value is returned with
the same data type of the column, or nil
if there's no
row. See calculate
for examples with options.
Person.minimum('age') # => 7
Use pluck
as a shortcut to select one or more attributes
without loading a bunch of records just to grab the attributes you want.
Person.pluck(:name)
instead of
Person.all.map(&:name)
Pluck returns an Array
of attribute values type-casted to
match the plucked column names, if they can be deduced. Plucking an SQL
fragment returns String values by default.
Person.pluck(:id)
# SELECT people.id FROM people
# => [1, 2, 3]
Person.pluck(:id, :name)
# SELECT people.id, people.name FROM people
# => [[1, 'David'], [2, 'Jeremy'], [3, 'Jose']]
Person.pluck('DISTINCT role')
# SELECT DISTINCT role FROM people
# => ['admin', 'member', 'guest']
Person.where(age: 21).limit(5).pluck(:id)
# SELECT people.id FROM people WHERE people.age = 21 LIMIT 5
# => [2, 3]
Person.pluck('DATEDIFF(updated_at, created_at)')
# SELECT DATEDIFF(updated_at, created_at) FROM people
# => ['0', '27761', '173']
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/calculations.rb, line 150 def pluck(*column_names) column_names.map! do |column_name| if column_name.is_a?(Symbol) && self.column_names.include?(column_name.to_s) "#{connection.quote_table_name(table_name)}.#{connection.quote_column_name(column_name)}" else column_name end end if has_include?(column_names.first) construct_relation_for_association_calculations.pluck(*column_names) else relation = spawn relation.select_values = column_names result = klass.connection.select_all(relation.arel, nil, bind_values) columns = result.columns.map do |key| klass.column_types.fetch(key) { result.column_types.fetch(key) { Class.new { def type_cast(v); v; end }.new } } end result = result.map do |attributes| values = klass.initialize_attributes(attributes).values columns.zip(values).map do |column, value| column.type_cast(value) end end columns.one? ? result.map!(&:first) : result end end
Calculates the sum of values on a given column. The value is returned with
the same data type of the column, 0 if there's no row. See
calculate
for examples with options.
Person.sum('age') # => 4562
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/calculations.rb, line 58 def sum(*args) if block_given? ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn( "Calling #sum with a block is deprecated and will be removed in Rails 4.1. " "If you want to perform sum calculation over the array of elements, use `to_a.sum(&block)`." ) self.to_a.sum(*args) {|*block_args| yield(*block_args)} else calculate(:sum, *args) end end