How to access model hasMany Relation with where condition?

LaravelLaravel 4Eloquent

Laravel Problem Overview


I created a model Game using a condition / constraint for a relation as follows:

class Game extends Eloquent {
    // many more stuff here

    // relation without any constraints ...works fine 
    public function videos() {
        return $this->hasMany('Video');
    }

    // results in a "problem", se examples below
    public function available_videos() {
        return $this->hasMany('Video')->where('available','=', 1);
    }
}

When using it somehow like this:

$game = Game::with('available_videos')->find(1);
$game->available_videos->count();

everything works fine, as roles is the resulting collection.

MY PROBLEM:

when I try to access it without eager loading

$game = Game::find(1);
$game->available_videos->count();

an Exception is thrown as it says "Call to a member function count() on a non-object".

Using

$game = Game::find(1);
$game->load('available_videos');
$game->available_videos->count();

works fine, but it seems quite complicated to me, as I do not need to load related models, if I do not use conditions within my relation.

Have I missed something? How can I ensure, that available_videos are accessible without using eager loading?

For anyone interested, I have also posted this issue on http://forums.laravel.io/viewtopic.php?id=10470

Laravel Solutions


Solution 1 - Laravel

I think that this is the correct way:

class Game extends Eloquent {
    // many more stuff here

    // relation without any constraints ...works fine 
    public function videos() {
        return $this->hasMany('Video');
    }

    // results in a "problem", se examples below
    public function available_videos() {
        return $this->videos()->where('available','=', 1);
    }
}

And then you'll have to

$game = Game::find(1);
var_dump( $game->available_videos()->get() );

Solution 2 - Laravel

I think this is what you're looking for (Laravel 4, see http://laravel.com/docs/eloquent#querying-relations)

$games = Game::whereHas('video', function($q)
{
    $q->where('available','=', 1);

})->get();

Solution 3 - Laravel

//use getQuery() to add condition

public function videos() {
    $instance =$this->hasMany('Video');
    $instance->getQuery()->where('available','=', 1);
    return $instance
}

// simply

public function videos() {
    return $this->hasMany('Video')->where('available','=', 1);
}

Solution 4 - Laravel

Just in case anyone else encounters the same problems.

Note, that relations are required to be camelcase. So in my case available_videos() should have been availableVideos().

You can easily find out investigating the Laravel source:

// Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model.php
...
/**
 * Get an attribute from the model.
 *
 * @param  string  $key
 * @return mixed
 */
public function getAttribute($key)
{
	$inAttributes = array_key_exists($key, $this->attributes);

	// If the key references an attribute, we can just go ahead and return the
	// plain attribute value from the model. This allows every attribute to
	// be dynamically accessed through the _get method without accessors.
	if ($inAttributes || $this->hasGetMutator($key))
	{
		return $this->getAttributeValue($key);
	}

	// If the key already exists in the relationships array, it just means the
	// relationship has already been loaded, so we'll just return it out of
	// here because there is no need to query within the relations twice.
	if (array_key_exists($key, $this->relations))
	{
		return $this->relations[$key];
	}

	// If the "attribute" exists as a method on the model, we will just assume
	// it is a relationship and will load and return results from the query
	// and hydrate the relationship's value on the "relationships" array.
	$camelKey = camel_case($key);

	if (method_exists($this, $camelKey))
	{
		return $this->getRelationshipFromMethod($key, $camelKey);
	}
}

This also explains why my code worked, whenever I loaded the data using the load() method before.

Anyway, my example works perfectly okay now, and $model->availableVideos always returns a Collection.

Solution 5 - Laravel

If you want to apply condition on the relational table you may use other solutions as well.. This solution is working from my end.

public static function getAllAvailableVideos() {
        $result = self::with(['videos' => function($q) {
                        $q->select('id', 'name');
                        $q->where('available', '=', 1);
                    }])                    
                ->get();
        return $result;
    }

Solution 6 - Laravel

 public function outletAmenities()
{
    return $this->hasMany(OutletAmenities::class,'outlet_id','id')
        ->join('amenity_master','amenity_icon_url','=','image_url')
        ->where('amenity_master.status',1)
        ->where('outlet_amenities.status',1);
}

Solution 7 - Laravel

I have fixed the similar issue by passing associative array as the first argument inside Builder::with method.

Imagine you want to include child relations by some dynamic parameters but don't want to filter parent results.

Model.php

public function child ()
{
    return $this->hasMany(ChildModel::class);
}

Then, in other place, when your logic is placed you can do something like filtering relation by HasMany class. For example (very similar to my case):

$search = 'Some search string';
$result = Model::query()->with(
    [
        'child' => function (HasMany $query) use ($search) {
            $query->where('name', 'like', "%{$search}%");
        }
    ]
);

Then you will filter all the child results but parent models will not filter. Thank you for attention.

Solution 8 - Laravel

Model (App\Post.php):

/**
 * Get all comments for this post.
 */
public function comments($published = false)
{
    $comments = $this->hasMany('App\Comment');
    if($published) $comments->where('published', 1);

    return $comments;
}

Controller (App\Http\Controllers\PostController.php):

/**
 * Display the specified resource.
 *
 * @param int $id
 * @return \Illuminate\Http\Response
 */
public function post($id)
{
    $post = Post::with('comments')
        ->find($id);

    return view('posts')->with('post', $post);
}

Blade template (posts.blade.php):

{{-- Get all comments--}}
@foreach ($post->comments as $comment)
    code...
@endforeach

{{-- Get only published comments--}}
@foreach ($post->comments(true)->get() as $comment)
    code...
@endforeach

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
QuestionRemlubenView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - LaravelAntonio Carlos RibeiroView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - LaravelSabrina LeggettView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Laravelxsilen TView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - LaravelRemlubenView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - LaravelNikunj K.View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - LaravelkushView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - LaravelVitaliiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - LaravelSanto BoldizarView Answer on Stackoverflow