instance method
find
Ruby on Rails 3.0.20
Since v3.0.20Signature
find(*args)
Find operates with four different retrieval approaches:
-
Find by id - This can either be a specific id (1), a list of ids (1, 5, 6), or an array of ids ([5, 6, 10]). If no record can be found for all of the listed ids, then RecordNotFound will be raised.
-
Find first - This will return the first record matched by the options used. These options can either be specific conditions or merely an order. If no record can be matched,
nilis returned. UseModel.find(:first, *args)or its shortcutModel.first(*args). -
Find last - This will return the last record matched by the options used. These options can either be specific conditions or merely an order. If no record can be matched,
nilis returned. UseModel.find(:last, *args)or its shortcutModel.last(*args). -
Find all - This will return all the records matched by the options used. If no records are found, an empty array is returned. Use
Model.find(:all, *args)or its shortcutModel.all(*args).
All approaches accept an options hash as their last parameter.
Parameters
-
:conditions- An SQL fragment like “administrator = 1”,["user_name = ?", username], or["user_name = :user_name", { :user_name => user_name }]. See conditions in the intro. -
:order- An SQL fragment like “created_at DESC, name”. -
:group- An attribute name by which the result should be grouped. Uses theGROUP BYSQL-clause. -
:having- Combined with:groupthis can be used to filter the records that aGROUP BYreturns. Uses theHAVINGSQL-clause. -
:limit- An integer determining the limit on the number of rows that should be returned. -
:offset- An integer determining the offset from where the rows should be fetched. So at 5, it would skip rows 0 through 4. -
:joins- Either an SQL fragment for additional joins like “LEFT JOIN comments ON comments.post_id = id” (rarely needed), named associations in the same form used for the:includeoption, which will perform anINNER JOINon the associated table(s), or an array containing a mixture of both strings and named associations. If the value is a string, then the records will be returned read-only since they will have attributes that do not correspond to the table’s columns. Pass:readonly => falseto override. -
:include- Names associations that should be loaded alongside. The symbols named refer to already defined associations. See eager loading under Associations. -
:select- By default, this is “*” as in “SELECT * FROM”, but can be changed if you, for example, want to do a join but not include the joined columns. Takes a string with the SELECT SQL fragment (e.g. “id, name”). -
:from- By default, this is the table name of the class, but can be changed to an alternate table name (or even the name of a database view). -
:readonly- Mark the returned records read-only so they cannot be saved or updated. -
:lock- An SQL fragment like “FOR UPDATE” or “LOCK IN SHARE MODE”.:lock => truegives connection’s default exclusive lock, usually “FOR UPDATE”.
Examples
# find by id Person.find(1) # returns the object for ID = 1 Person.find(1, 2, 6) # returns an array for objects with IDs in (1, 2, 6) Person.find([7, 17]) # returns an array for objects with IDs in (7, 17) Person.find([1]) # returns an array for the object with ID = 1 Person.where("administrator = 1").order("created_on DESC").find(1)
Note that returned records may not be in the same order as the ids you provide since database rows are unordered. Give an explicit :order to ensure the results are sorted.
Examples
# find first Person.first # returns the first object fetched by SELECT * FROM people Person.where(["user_name = ?", user_name]).first Person.where(["user_name = :u", { :u => user_name }]).first Person.order("created_on DESC").offset(5).first # find last Person.last # returns the last object fetched by SELECT * FROM people Person.where(["user_name = ?", user_name]).last Person.order("created_on DESC").offset(5).last # find all Person.all # returns an array of objects for all the rows fetched by SELECT * FROM people Person.where(["category IN (?)", categories]).limit(50).all Person.where({ :friends => ["Bob", "Steve", "Fred"] }).all Person.offset(10).limit(10).all Person.includes([:account, :friends]).all Person.group("category").all
Example for find with a lock: Imagine two concurrent transactions: each will read person.visits == 2, add 1 to it, and save, resulting in two saves of person.visits = 3. By locking the row, the second transaction has to wait until the first is finished; we get the expected person.visits == 4.
Person.transaction do person = Person.lock(true).find(1) person.visits += 1 person.save! end
Parameters
-
argsrest
Source
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/finder_methods.rb, line 95
def find(*args)
return to_a.find { |*block_args| yield(*block_args) } if block_given?
options = args.extract_options!
if options.present?
apply_finder_options(options).find(*args)
else
case args.first
when :first, :last, :all
send(args.first)
else
find_with_ids(*args)
end
end
end
Defined in activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/finder_methods.rb line 95
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Defined in ActiveRecord::FinderMethods