I want to match a url field against a url prefix (which may contain percent signs), e.g. .where("url LIKE ?"开发者_StackOverflow中文版, "#{some_url}%")
.
What's the most Rails way?
From Rails version 4.2.x there is an active record method called sanitize_sql_like
. So, you can do in your model a search scope like:
scope :search, -> search { where('"accounts"."name" LIKE ?', "#{sanitize_sql_like(search)}%") }
and call the scope like:
Account.search('Test_%')
The resulting escaped sql string is:
SELECT "accounts".* FROM "accounts" WHERE ("accounts"."name" LIKE 'Test\_\%%')
Read more here: http://edgeapi.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Sanitization/ClassMethods.html
If I understand correctly, you're worried about "%" appearing inside some_url
and rightly so; you should also be worried about embedded underscores ("_") too, they're the LIKE version of "." in a regex. I don't think there is any Rails-specific way of doing this so you're left with gsub
:
.where('url like ?', some_url.gsub('%', '\\\\\%').gsub('_', '\\\\\_') + '%')
There's no need for string interpolation here either. You need to double the backslashes to escape their meaning from the database's string parser so that the LIKE parser will see simple "\%" and know to ignore the escaped percent sign.
You should check your logs to make sure the two backslashes get through. I'm getting confusing results from checking things in irb
, using five (!) gets the right output but I don't see the sense in it; if anyone does see the sense in five of them, an explanatory comment would be appreciated.
UPDATE: Jason King has kindly offered a simplification for the nightmare of escaped escape characters. This lets you specify a temporary escape character so you can do things like this:
.where("url LIKE ? ESCAPE '!'", some_url.gsub(/[!%_]/) { |x| '!' + x })
I've also switched to the block form of gsub
to make it a bit less nasty.
This is standard SQL92 syntax, so will work in any DB that supports that, including PostgreSQL, MySQL and SQLite.
Embedding one language inside another is always a bit of a nightmarish kludge and there's not that much you can do about it. There will always be ugly little bits that you just have to grin and bear.
https://gist.github.com/3656283
With this code,
Item.where(Item.arel_table[:name].matches("%sample!%code%"))
correctly escapes %
between "sample" and "code", and matches "AAAsample%codeBBB" but does not for "AAAsampleBBBcodeCCC" on MySQL, PostgreSQL and SQLite3 at least.
Post.where('url like ?', "%#{some_url + '%'}%)
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