FilterMe provids helpers and classes that makes request filtering easy using Ruby classes and object oriented development.
gem "filter_me", "0.1.2"
* Highly subject to change as the API moves closer to 1.0
class AccountsFilter < FilterMe::ActiveRecordFilter
model Account
association :user
field :cost, :all
field :account_type, [:matches]
end
An example of field :cost, [:lt]
above would mean that the following method could be called:
Account.arel_table[:cost].lt(filter_value)
Example Usage:
class AccountsController < ApplicationController
include FilterMe
def index
@accounts = filter_me(Account.all)
respond_to do |format|
format.json { render json: @accounts }
end
end
end
Plain request: http://0.0.0.0:3000/accounts.json
{"accounts":[
{"id":1, "cost":100000, "account_type":"admin"},
{"id":2, "cost":50000, "account_type":"paid"},
{"id":3, "cost":10000, "account_type":"free"}
]}
Performs:
SELECT "accounts".* FROM "accounts"
Now with some filtering:
http://0.0.0.0:3000/accounts.json?filters%5Baccount_type%5D%5Bmatches%5D=paid, $.param({filters: {account_type: {matches: "paid"}}})
{"accounts":[
{"id":2, "cost":50000, "account_type":"paid"}
]}
Performs:
SELECT "accounts".* FROM "accounts" WHERE ("accounts"."account_type" LIKE 'paid')
Brilliant!
class UsersFilter < FilterMe::ActiveRecordFilter
model User
association :account # Defaults to AccountsFilter, can override with :filter_class => SomeFilter
field :username, [:matches, :eq, :not_eq]
field :email, [:matches, :eq, :not_eq]
end
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include FilterMe
def index
@users = filter_me(User.all)
respond_to do |format|
format.json { render json: @users }
end
end
end
Plain request: http://0.0.0.0:3000/users.json
{"users":[
{"id":1, "username":"test1", "email":"test2@test.com", "account": {
"id":1, "cost":100000, "account_type":"admin"
}},
{"id":2, "username":"test2", "email":"test2@test.com", "account":{
"id":2, "cost":50000, "account_type":"paid"
}},
{"id":3, "username":"test3", "email":"test3@spaz.com", "account":{
"id":3, "cost":10000, "account_type":"free"
}}
]}
Performs:
SELECT "users".* FROM "users"
Now with some nested filtering: http://0.0.0.0:3000/users.json?filters%5Baccount%5D%5Bcost%5D%5Blt%5D=50000
{"users":[
{"id":3, "username":"test3", "email":"test3@spaz.com", "account":{
"id":3,"cost":10000, "account_type":"free"
}}
]}
Performs:
SELECT "users".* FROM "users" INNER JOIN "accounts" ON "accounts"."user_id" = "users"."id"
WHERE ("accounts"."cost" < 50000)
Need to provide some top secret super duper special filtering? Go ahead:
class UsersFilter < FilterMe::ActiveRecordFilter
model User
association :account
field :username, [:matches, :eq, :not_eq]
field :email, [:matches, :eq, :not_eq]
def special_filter(relation, filters)
relation.where(id: filters)
end
end
SELECT "users".* FROM "users" INNER JOIN "accounts" ON "accounts"."user_id" = "users"."id"
WHERE ("accounts"."cost" >= 50000) AND "users"."id" IN (3, 2)
Copyright (c) 2014, Filter Me is developed and maintained by Sam Clopton, and is released under the open MIT Licence.