Sometimes you're working on a Rails project and you think: "hey! This should be easy!". Well, most of the time it is. I'm working on a project that allows people to rate objects (what they really are doesn't matter at all).
I'm using the <ahref="http://juixe.com/svn/acts_as_rateable">acts_as_rateable plugin</a> which creates an extra database table containing all ratings. I also have a table with my objects. Using the plugin I'm now able to do the following:
<prelang="ruby">obj = Object.find(:first)
obj.add_rating Rating.new(:rating => 4)
obj.add_rating Rating.new(:rating => 5)
obj.rating
=> 4.5</pre>
This works all perfectly, until you want to sort objects by rating. You could construct a huge SQL query to join the two tables, but that's not really efficient, especially when your database gets bigger.
The solution is very easy and even more elegant. Use a cache! For this, you'll first have to add a new field to the objects table. Do this in a migration:
Now, in the Object model, add the following method:
<prelang="ruby">def rate_with(rating)
add_rating(rating)
update_attribute('rating_cache', self.rating)
end</pre>
You'll need to change your controller from using #add_rating to #rate_with. The syntax is exactly the same. Now, when you add a rating, we also store the average rating in the rating_cache column.
To get back to the sorting problem, you can now use the rating_cache column to sort Objects.