Query Scopes and Subselects
What are Scopes?
Query scopes are a way to encapsulate query constraints in your entities while giving them readable names .
A Practical Example
For instance, let's say that you need to write a report for subscribers to your site. Maybe you track subscribers in a users
table with a boolean flag in a subscribed
column. Additionally, you want to see the oldest subscribers first. You keep track of when a user subscribed in a subscribedDate
column. Your query might look as follows:
Now nothing is wrong with this query. It retrieves the data correctly and you continue on with your day.
Later, you need to retrieve a list of subscribed users for a different part of the site. So, you write a query like this:
We've duplicated the logic for how to retrieve active users now. If the database representation changed, we'd have to change it in multiple places. For instance, what if instead of keeping track of a boolean flag in the database, we just checked that the subscribedDate
column wasn't null?
Now we see the problem. Let's look at the solution.
The key here is that we are trying to retrieve subscribed users. Let's add a scope to our User
entity for subscribed
:
Now, we can use this scope in our query:
We can use this on our first example as well, for our report.
We've successfully encapsulated our concept of a subscribed user!
We can add as many scopes as we'd like. Let's add one for longestSubscribers
.
Now our query is as follows:
Best of all, we can reuse those scopes anywhere we see fit without duplicating logic.
Usage
All query scopes are methods on an entity that begin with the scope
keyword. You call these functions without the scope
keyword (as shown above).
Each scope is passed the query
, a reference to the current QuickBuilder
instance, as the first argument. Any other arguments passed to the scope will be passed in order after that.
Scopes that Return Values
All of the examples so far either returned the QuickBuilder
object or nothing. Doing so lets you continue to chain methods on your Quick entity. If you instead return a value, Quick will pass on that value to your code. This lets you use scopes as shortcut methods that work on a query.
For example, maybe you have a domain method to reset passwords for a group of users, and you want the count of users updated returned.
Global Scopes
Occasionally, you want to apply a scope to each retrieval of an entity. An example of this is an Admin entity which is just a User entity with a type of admin. Global Scopes can be registered in the applyGlobalScopes
method on an entity. Inside this entity you can call any number of scopes:
These scopes will be applied to the query without needing to call the scope again.
To temporarily disable global scopes that have been applied to an entity, you have the option to disable them individually or all at once by utilizing the withoutGlobalScope
method.
Subselects
Subselects are a useful way to grab data from related tables without having to execute the full relationship. Sometimes you just want a small piece of information like the lastLoginDate
of a user, not the entire Login
relationship. Subselects are perfect for this use case. You can even use subselects to provide the correct key for dynamic subselect relationships. We'll show how both work here.
Quick handles subselect properties (or computed or formula properties) through query scopes. This allows you to dynamically include a subselect. If you would like to always include a subselect, add it to your entity's list of global scopes.
Here's an example of grabbing the lastLoginDate
for a User:
We'd add this subselect by calling our scope:
We can even constrain our User
entity based on the value of the subselect, so long as we've called the scope adding the subselect first (or made it a global scope).
Or add a new scope to User
based on the subselect:
In this example, we are using the addSubselect
helper method. Here is that function signature:
Argument | Type | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
name | string |
| The name for the subselect. This will be available as an attribute. | |
subselect | string OR QueryBuilder OR Function |
| Either a dot-delimited string representing a relationship chain ending with an attribute name, a QueryBuilder object, or a closure that configures a QueryBuilder object can be provided. If a closure is provided it will be passed a query object as its only parameter. The resulting query object will be used to computed the subselect. |
You might be wondering why not use the logins
relationship? Or even logins().latest().limit( 1 ).get()
? Because that executes a second query. Using a subselect we get all the information we need in one query, no matter how many entities we are pulling back.
Using Relationships in Subselects
In most cases the values you want as subselects are values from your entity's relationships. In these cases, you can use a shortcut to define your subselect in terms of your entity's relationships represented as a dot-delimited string.
Let's re-write the above subselect for lastLoginDate
for a User using the existing relationship:
Much simpler! In addition to be much simpler this code is also more dynamic and reusable. We have a relationship defined for logins if we need to fetch them. If we change how the logins
relationship is structured, we only have one place we need to change.
With the query cleaned up using existing relationships, you might find yourself adding subselects directly in your handlers instead of behind scopes. This is fine in most cases. Keep an eye on how many places you use the subselect in case you need to re-evaluate and move it behind a scope.
Dynamic Subselect Relationships
Subselects can be used in conjunction with relationships to provide a dynamic, constrained relationship. In this example we will pull the latest post for a user.
This can be executed as follows:
As you can see, we are loading the id of the latest post in a subquery and then using that value to eager load the latestPost
relationship. This sequence will only execute two queries, no matter how many records are loaded.
Virtual Attributes
Virtual attributes are attributes that are not present on the table backing the Quick entity. A Subselect is an example of a virtual attribute. Other examples could include calculated counts or CASE
statement results.
By default, if you add a virtual column to a Quick query, you won't see anything in the entity. This is because Quick needs to have an attribute defined to map the result to. You can create a virtual attribute in these cases.
This step is unnecessary when using the addSubselect
helper method.
Here's an example including the result of a CASE
statement as a field:
With this code, we could now access the publishedStatus
just like any other attribute. It will not be updated, inserted, or saved though, as it is just a virtual column.
The appendVirtualAttribute
method adds the given name as an attribute available in the entity.
appendVirtualAttribute
Argument | Type | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
name | string |
| The attribute name to create. |
Creates a virtual attribute for the given name.
It is likely that Quick will introduce more helper methods in the future making these calls simpler.