== Ambitious SQL A simple experiment and even simpler query library. I could tell you all about how awesome the internals are, or how fun it was to write, or how it'll make you rich and famous, but instead I'm just going to show you some examples. The goal is this: write once, run with ActiveRecord, Sequel, DataMapper, whatever. Kind of like Rack for databases. == Git It (Not with Git, though) $ sudo gem install ambition -y This will suck in Ambition and its dependencies (ParseTree & ActiveRecord). It's fully usable outside of Rails (I use it in a Camping app or two), as long as you're riding ActiveRecord. To use with Rails, after installing the gem: $ cd vendor/plugins $ gem unpack ambition RDoc exists: http://rock.errtheblog.com/ambition == Examples Basically, you write your SQL in Ruby. No, not in Ruby. As Ruby. User.select { |u| u.city == 'San Francisco' }.each do |user| puts user.name end And that's it. The key is the +each+ method. You build up a +Query+ using +select+, +first+, and +sort_by+, then call +each+ on it. This'll run the query and enumerate through the results. Really, you can use any Enumerable method: +map+, +each_with_index+, etc. Our +Query+ object has two useful methods: +to_sql+ and +to_hash+. With these, we can check out what exactly we're building. Not everyone has +to_sql+, though. Mostly ignore these methods and treat everything like you normally would. See, +to_sql+: >> User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.to_sql => "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon'" See, +to_hash+: >> User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.to_hash => {:conditions=>"users.`name` = 'jon'"} == Limitations You can use variables, but any more complex Ruby (right now) won't work inside your blocks. Just do it outside the block and assign it to a variable. Instead of: User.select { |m| m.date == 2.days.ago } Just do: date = 2.days.ago User.select { |m| m.date == date } Instance variables and globals work, too. Same with method calls. == Equality -- select { |u| u.field == 'bob' } User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon'" User.select { |m| m.name != 'jon' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` <> 'jon'" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' && m.age == 21 } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE (users.`name` = 'jon' AND users.`age` = 21)" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' || m.age == 21 } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE (users.`name` = 'jon' OR users.`age` = 21)" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' || m.age == 21 && m.password == 'pass' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE (users.`name` = 'jon' OR (users.`age` = 21 AND users.`password` = 'pass'))" User.select { |m| (m.name == 'jon' || m.name == 'rick') && m.age == 21 } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE ((users.`name` = 'jon' OR users.`name` = 'rick') AND users.`age` = 21)" == Associations -- select { |u| u.field == 'bob' && u.association.field == 'bob@bob.com' } The +to_sql+ method doesn't work on associations yet, but that's okay: they can still query through ActiveRecord just fine. User.select { |u| u.email == 'chris@ozmm.org' && u.profile.name == 'chris wanstrath' }.map(&:title) SELECT users.`id` AS t0_r0, ... FROM users LEFT OUTER JOIN profiles ON profiles.user_id = users.id WHERE ((users.`email` = 'chris@ozmm.org' AND profiles.name = 'chris wanstrath')) == Comparisons -- select { |u| u.age > 21 } User.select { |m| m.age > 21 } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`age` > 21" User.select { |m| m.age < 21 }.to_sql "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`age` < 21" User.select { |m| [1, 2, 3, 4].include? m.id } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`id` IN (1, 2, 3, 4)" == LIKE and REGEXP (RLIKE) -- select { |m| m.name =~ 'chris' } User.select { |m| m.name =~ 'chris' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` LIKE 'chris'" User.select { |m| m.name =~ 'chri%' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` LIKE 'chri%'" User.select { |m| m.name !~ 'chris' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` NOT LIKE 'chris'" User.select { |m| !(m.name =~ 'chris') } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` NOT LIKE 'chris'" User.select { |m| m.name =~ /chris/ } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` REGEXP 'chris'" == #detect User.detect { |m| m.name == 'chris' } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'chris' LIMIT 1" == LIMITs -- first, first(x), [offset, limit], [range] User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.first "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' LIMIT 1" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.first(5) "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' LIMIT 5" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }[10, 20] "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' LIMIT 10, 20" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }[10..20] "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' LIMIT 10, 10" == ORDER -- sort_by { |u| u.field } User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { |m| m.name } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' ORDER BY users.name" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { |m| [ m.name, m.age ] } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' ORDER BY users.name, users.age" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { |m| [ m.name, -m.age ] } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' ORDER BY users.name, users.age DESC" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { |m| [ -m.name, -m.age ] } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' ORDER BY users.name DESC, users.age DESC" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { |m| -m.age } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' ORDER BY users.age DESC" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { |m| -m.profiles.title } "SELECT users.`id` AS t0_r0, ... FROM users LEFT OUTER JOIN profiles ON profiles.user_id = users.id WHERE (users.`name` = 'jon') ORDER BY profiles.title DESC" User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.sort_by { rand } "SELECT * FROM users WHERE users.`name` = 'jon' ORDER BY RAND()" == COUNT -- select { |u| u.name == 'jon' }.size User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.size SELECT count(*) AS count_all FROM users WHERE (users.`name` = 'jon') >> User.select { |m| m.name == 'jon' }.size => 21 == SELECT * FROM bugs Found a bug? Sweet. Add it at the Lighthouse: http://err.lighthouseapp.com/projects/466-plugins/tickets/new Feature requests are welcome. * Chris Wanstrath [ chris@ozmm.org ]