I have a model that has ratings in it for an post.
I want to display a list of the top 5 ratings for a given post, but I am completely lost on where to start. I figure the find method might have something useful, but I'm unsure. I've even considered looping through each rec开发者_如何学编程ord getting its size, adding it to a hash, sorting the hash, etc., but that seems too complicated.
Does anyone know how I might accomplish something like this?
Thank you
Edit: I found this to get all the posts that have the rating of agree:
Post.find(:all, :include => :post_ratings, :condtions => ['post_ratings.agree = ?', true])
The only problem is I can't figure out how to get the top five ratings from this query.
Might be worth giving a little more of an example of the code you're working with but I'll answer with a few assumptions.
If you have:
class Post
has_many :post_ratings
end
class PostRating
belongs_to :post
# Has a 'rating' attribute
end
You can find the top five post ratings with:
p = Post.find(:first) # For example
p.post_ratings.find(:all, :limit => 5, :order => 'rating desc')
To get the top five post ratings overall you can do:
PostRating.find(:all, :limit => 5, :order => 'rating desc')
UPDATE:
Following your edit it seems you have an 'agree' and a 'disagree' column. Not sure how that works in combination so I'll stick with the 'agree' column. What you'll need to do is count the ratings with agree flagged. Something like:
count_hsh PostRating.count(:group => 'post_id',
:order => 'count(*) desc',
:conditions => { :agree => true },
:limit => 5)
This will return you a hash mapping the post id to the count of agree ratings. You can then use that post_id to locate the posts themselves. The ratings are provided by the counts so the individual ratings are (I think) of no use though you could access them by calling post.post_ratings.
So, to get the top five posts:
@top_five_posts = []
count_hsh.each_pair do |post_id, ratings|
p = Post.find(post_id)
p[:rating_count] = ratings
@top_five_posts << p
end
This is probably more verbose than it could be but is hopefully illustrative. The p[:rating_count]
is a virtual attribute which isn't in the database but will allow you to access the .rating_count
method on the posts in your view if you wish to.
Assuming the same Post and PostRating from Shadwell's answer:
class Post
has_many :post_ratings
end
class PostRating
belongs_to :post
# Has a 'rating' attribute
end
To get the top five ratings for all Posts:
post_ratings.find(:all, :limit => 5, :order => 'rating desc')
To get the top five ratings for a specific Post you can:
p = Post.find(:first)
post_ratings.find_all_by_post_id(p.id, :limit => 5, :order => 'rating desc')
To find all posts sorted by average rating, you can use ActiveRecord::Calculations.
PostRating.average(:rating, :group => :post_id, :include => :post, :order => 'average desc')
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