Eloquent eager load Order by

LaravelLaravel 4EloquentEager Loading

Laravel Problem Overview


I have problem with eloquent query. I am using eager loading (one to one Relationship) to get 'student' With the 'exam', Using the code below.

Student::with('exam')->orderBy('exam.result', 'DESC')->get()

And i want to order received rows by the 'result' column in 'exam'. I am using

->orderBy('exam.result', 'DESC')

But it is not working. Any ideas how to do it ?

Laravel Solutions


Solution 1 - Laravel

Try this:

Student::with(array('exam' => function($query) {
        $query->orderBy('result', 'DESC');
    }))
    ->get();

Solution 2 - Laravel

If you need to order your students collection by the result column, you will need to join the tables.

Student::with('exam')
       ->join('exam', 'students.id', '=', 'exam.student_id')
       ->orderBy('exam.result', 'DESC')
       ->get()

In this case, assuming you have a column student_id and your exams table are named exam.

Solution 3 - Laravel

If you ALWAYS want it sorted by exam result, you can add the sortBy call directly in the relationship function on the model.

public function exam() {
  return this->hasMany(Exam::class)->orderBy('result');
}

(credit for this answer goes to pfriendly - he answered it here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25105113/how-to-sort-an-eloquent-subquery)

Solution 4 - Laravel

tl;dr

Student::with('exam')->get()->sortByDesc('exam.result');

This will sort the results of the query after eager loading using collection methods and not by a MySQL ORDER BY.

Explanation

When you eager load you can't use an ORDER BY on the loaded relations because those will be requested and assembled as a result of a second query. As you can see it in the Laravel documentation eager loading happens in 2 query.

If you want to use MySQL's ORDER BY you have to join the related tables.

As a workaround, you can run your query and sort the resulting collection with sortBy, sortByDesc or even sort. This solution has advantages and disadvantages over the join solution:

Advantages:

  • You keep Eloquent functionality.
  • Shorter and more intuitive code.

Disadvantages:

  • Sorting will be done by PHP instead of the database engine.

  • You can sort only by a single column, unless you provide a custom closure for the sorter functions.

  • If you need only a part of the ordered results of a query (e.g. ORDER BY with LIMIT), you have to fetch everything, order it, then filter the ordered result, otherwise you will end up with only the filtered part being ordered (ordering will not consider the filtered out elements). So this solution is only acceptable when you would work on the whole data set anyway or the overhead is not a problem.

Solution 5 - Laravel

This worked for me:

$query = Student::select(['id','name']);


    $query->has('exam')->with(['exam' => function ($query) {
        return $query->orderBy('result','ASC');
    }]);


    return $query->get();

Solution 6 - Laravel

You could use \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Relation and query scopes to add far column through relationship, I wrote a traits for this, it misses HasOne o HasMany but having BelongsTo and BelongsToMany could easily adapted

Also the method could be enhanced to support more than depth 1 for multiple chained relationship, I made room for that

<?php
/**
 * User: matteo.orefice
 * Date: 16/05/2017
 * Time: 10:54
 */


use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\BelongsToMany;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\BelongsTo;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;


trait WithFarColumnsTrait
{

    public function scopeWithFarColumns(Builder $query , $relationPath , $columns , $tableAliasPrefix = null)
    {
        $relationPath = array_wrap($relationPath);
        $tableAliasPrefix = $tableAliasPrefix ?: WithFarColumnsTrait::randomStringAlpha(3);
        $currentModel = $this;
        
        $subQueries = [];
        $relationIndex = 0;
        foreach ($relationPath as $relationName) {
            if (method_exists($currentModel , $relationName)) {
                $relation = $currentModel->$relationName();
            } else {
                throw new BadMethodCallException("Relationship $relationName does not exist, cannot join.");
            }
            $currentTable = $currentModel->getTable();
            if ($relationIndex == 0) {
                $query->addSelect($currentTable . '.*');
            }
            $relatedModel = $relation->getRelated();
            /**
             * @var string
             */
            $relatedTable = $relatedModel->getTable();
            
            if ($relation instanceof BelongsTo) {
                foreach ($columns as $alias => $column) {
                    $tableAlias = $tableAliasPrefix . $relationIndex;
                    $tableAndAlias = $relatedTable . ' AS ' . $tableAlias;
                    /**
                     * Al momento gestisce soltanto la prima relazione
                     * todo: navigare le far relationships e creare delle join composte
                     */
                    if (!isset($subQueries[$alias])) {
                        $subQueries[$alias] = $currentQuery = DB::query()
                            ->from($tableAndAlias)
                            ->whereColumn(
                                $relation->getQualifiedForeignKey() , // 'child-table.fk-column'
                                '=' ,
                                $tableAlias . '.' . $relation->getOwnerKey()  // 'parent-table.id-column'
                            )
                            ->select($tableAlias . '.' . $column);
                        // se la colonna ha una chiave stringa e' un alias
                        /**
                         * todo: in caso di relazioni multiple aggiungere solo per la piu lontana
                         */
                        if (is_string($alias)) {
                            $query->selectSub($currentQuery , $alias);
                        } else {
                            throw new \InvalidArgumentException('Columns must be an associative array');
                        }
                    } 
                    else {
                        throw new \Exception('Multiple relation chain not implemented yet');
                    }
                } // end foreach <COLUMNs>
            } // endif
            else if ($relation instanceof BelongsToMany) {
                foreach ($columns as $alias => $column) {
                    
                    $tableAlias = $tableAliasPrefix . $relationIndex;
                    $tableAndAlias = $relatedTable . ' AS ' . $tableAlias;
                   
                    if (!isset($subQueries[$alias])) {
                        $pivotTable = $relation->getTable();
                        $subQueries[$alias] = $currentQuery = DB::query()
                            ->from($tableAndAlias)
                            ->select($tableAlias . '.' . $column)
                            // final table vs pivot table
                            ->join(
                                $pivotTable ,                               // tabelle pivot
                                $relation->getQualifiedRelatedKeyName() ,    // pivot.fk_related_id
                                '=' ,
                                $tableAlias . '.' . $relatedModel->getKeyName() // related_with_alias.id
                            )
                            ->whereColumn(
                                $relation->getQualifiedForeignKeyName() ,
                                '=' ,
                                $relation->getParent()->getQualifiedKeyName()
                            );
                        
                        if (is_string($alias)) {
                            $query->selectSub($currentQuery , $alias);
                        } else {
                            throw new \InvalidArgumentException('Columns must be an associative array');
                        }
                    } 
                    else {
                        throw new \Exception('Multiple relation chain not implemented yet');
                    }
                } // end foreach <COLUMNs>
            } else {
                throw new \InvalidArgumentException(
                    sprintf("Relation $relationName of type %s is not supported" , get_class($relation))
                );
            }
            $currentModel = $relatedModel;
            $relationIndex++;
        } // end foreach <RELATIONs>
    }

    /**
     * @param $length
     * @return string
     */
    public static function randomStringAlpha($length) {
        $pool = array_merge(range('a', 'z'),range('A', 'Z'));
        $key = '';
        for($i=0; $i < $length; $i++) {
            $key .= $pool[mt_rand(0, count($pool) - 1)];
        }
        return $key;
    }
}

Solution 7 - Laravel

There is an alternative way of achieving the result you want to have without using joins. You can do the following to sort the students based on their exam's result. (Laravel 5.1):

$students = Student::with('exam')->get();

$students = $students->sortByDesc(function ($student, $key)
{
    return $student->exam->result;
});

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionAndriusView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - LaravelGlad To HelpView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - LaravelLuis DalmolinView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Laravelrosell.dkView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - LaraveltotymedliView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - LaravelGuruView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - LaravelMatteoOreficeITView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - LaravelJoschi VzfamView Answer on Stackoverflow