Skip to content

AdminUI/eloquent-power-joins

 
 

Repository files navigation

Eloquent Power Joins

Laravel Supported Versions Actions Status MIT Licensed Latest Version on Packagist Total Downloads

The Laravel magic you know, now applied to joins.

Joins are very useful in a lot of ways. If you are here, you most likely know about and use them. Eloquent is very powerful, but it lacks a bit of the "Laravel way" when using joins. This package make your joins in a more Laravel way, with more readable with less code while hiding implementation details from places they don't need to be exposed.

A few things we consider is missing when using joins which are very powerful Eloquent features:

  • Ability to use relationship definitions to make joins;
  • Ability to use model scopes inside different contexts;
  • Ability to query relationship existence using joins instead of where exists;
  • Ability to easily sort results based on columns or aggregations from related tables;

You can read a more detailed explanation on the problems this package solves on this blog post.

Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require kirschbaum-development/eloquent-power-joins

Usage

On any model you want to be able to use the methods described below, you should use the following trait:

use Kirschbaum\PowerJoins\PowerJoins;

class User extends Model
{
    use PowerJoins;
}

This package provides a few features.

1 - Join Relationship

Let's say you have a User model with a hasMany relationship to the Post model. If you want to join the tables, you would usually write something like:

User::select('users.*')->join('posts', 'posts.user_id', '=', 'users.id');

This package provides you with a new joinRelationship() method, which does the exact same thing.

User::joinRelationship('posts');

Both options produce the same results. In terms of code, you didn't save THAT much, but you are now using the relationship between the User and the Post models to join the tables. This means that you are now hiding how this relationship works behind the scenes (implementation details). You also don't need to change the code if the relationship type changes. You now have more readable and less overwhelming code.

But, it gets better when you need to join nested relationships. Let's assume you also have a hasMany relationship between the Post and Comment models and you need to join these tables, you can simply write:

User::joinRelationship('posts.comments');

So much better, wouldn't you agree?! You can also left or right join the relationships as needed.

User::leftJoinRelationship('posts.comments');
User::rightJoinRelationship('posts.comments');

Joining polymorphic relationships

Let's imagine, you have a Image model that is a polymorphic relationship (Post -> morphMany -> Image). Besides the regular join, you would also need to apply the where imageable_type = Image::class condition, otherwise you could get messy results.

Turns out, if you join a polymorphic relationship, Eloquent Power Joins automatically applies this condition for you. You simply need to call the same method.

Post::joinRelationship('images');

Applying conditions & callbacks to the joins

Now, let's say you want to apply a condition to the join you are making. You simply need to pass a callback as the second parameter to the joinRelationship method.

User::joinRelationship('posts', function ($join) {
    $join->where('posts.approved', true);
})->toSql();

For nested calls, you simply need to pass an array referencing the relationship names.

User::joinRelationship('posts.comments', [
    'posts' => function ($join) {
        $join->where('posts.published', true);
    },
    'comments' => function ($join) {
        $join->where('comments.approved', true);
    }
]);

For belongs to many calls, you need to pass an array with the relationship, and then an array with the table names.

User::joinRelationship('groups', [
    'groups' => [
        'groups' => function ($join) {
            // ...
        },
        // group_members is the intermediary table here
        'group_members' => function ($join) {
            $join->where('group_members.active', true);
        },
    ]
]);

Using model scopes inside the join callbacks 🤯

We consider this one of the most useful features of this package. Let's say, you have a published scope on your Post model:

    public function scopePublished($query)
    {
        $query->where('published', true);
    }

When joining relationships, you can use the scopes defined in the model being joined. How cool is this?

User::joinRelationship('posts', function ($join) {
    // the $join instance here can access any of the scopes defined in Post 🤯
    $join->published();
});

When using model scopes inside a join clause, you can't type hint the $query parameter in your scope. Also, keep in mind you are inside a join, so you are limited to use only conditions supported by joins.

Using aliases

Sometimes, you are going to need to use table aliases on your joins because you are joining the same table more than once. One option to accomplish this is to use the joinRelationshipUsingAlias method.

Post::joinRelationshipUsingAlias('category.parent')->get();

In case you need to specify the name of the alias which is going to be used, you can do in two different ways:

  1. Passing a string as the second parameter (this won't work for nested joins):
Post::joinRelationshipUsingAlias('category', 'category_alias')->get();
  1. Calling the as function inside the join callback.
Post::joinRelationship('category.parent', [
    'category' => function ($join) {
        $join->as('category_alias');
    },
    'parent' => function ($join) {
        $join->as('category_parent');
    },
])->get()

Select * from table

When making joins, using select * from ... can be dangerous as fields with the same name between the parent and the joined tables could conflict. Thinking on that, if you call the joinRelationship method without previously selecting any specific columns, Eloquent Power Joins will automatically include that for you. For instance, take a look at the following examples:

User::joinRelationship('posts')->toSql();
// select users.* from users inner join posts on posts.user_id = users.id

And, if you specify the select statement:

User::select('users.id')->joinRelationship('posts')->toSql();
// select users.id from users inner join posts on posts.user_id = users.id

Soft deletes

When joining any models which uses the SoftDeletes trait, the following condition will be also automatically applied to all your joins:

and "users"."deleted_at" is null

In case you want to include trashed models, you can call the ->withTrashed() method in the join callback.

UserProfile::joinRelationship('users', function ($join) {
    $join->withTrashed();
});

You can also call the onlyTrashed model as well:

UserProfile::joinRelationship('users', function ($join) {
    $join->onlyTrashed();
});

Extra conditions defined in relationships

If you have extra conditions in your relationship definitions, they will get automatically applied for you.

class User extends Model
{
    public function publishedPosts()
    {
        return $this->hasMany(Post::class)->published();
    }
}

If you call User::joinRelationship('publishedPosts')->get(), it will also apply the additional published scope to the join clause. It would produce an SQL more or less like this:

select users.* from users inner join posts on posts.user_id = posts.id and posts.published = 1

Global Scopes

If your model have global scopes applied to it, you can enable the global scopes by calling the withGlobalScopes method in your join clause, like this:

UserProfile::joinRelationship('users', function ($join) {
    $join->withGlobalScopes();
});

There's, though, a gotcha here. Your global scope cannot type-hint the Eloquent\Builder class in the first parameter of the apply method, otherwise you will get errors.

2 - Querying relationship existence (Using Joins)

Querying relationship existence is a very powerful and convenient feature of Eloquent. However, it uses the where exists syntax which is not always the best and may not be the more performant choice, depending on how many records you have or the structure of your tables.

This packages implements the same functionality, but instead of using the where exists syntax, it uses joins. Below, you can see the methods this package implements and also the Laravel equivalent.

Laravel Native Methods

User::has('posts');
User::has('posts.comments');
User::has('posts', '>', 3);
User::whereHas('posts', function ($query) {
    $query->where('posts.published', true);
});
User::doesntHave('posts');

Package equivalent, but using joins

User::powerJoinHas('posts');
User::powerJoinHas('posts.comments');
User::powerJoinHas('posts.comments', '>', 3);
User::powerJoinWhereHas('posts', function ($join) {
    $join->where('posts.published', true);
});
User::powerJoinDoesntHave('posts');

When using the powerJoinWhereHas method with relationships that involves more than 1 table (One to Many, Many to Many, etc.), use the array syntax to pass the callback:

User::powerJoinWhereHas('commentsThroughPosts', [
    'comments' => fn ($query) => $query->where('body', 'a')
])->get());

3 - Order by

You can also sort your query results using a column from another table using the orderByPowerJoins method.

User::orderByPowerJoins('profile.city');

If you need to pass some raw values for the order by function, you can do like this:

User::orderByPowerJoins(['profile', DB::raw('concat(city, ", ", state)']);

This query will sort the results based on the city column on the user_profiles table. You can also sort your results by aggregations (COUNT, SUM, AVG, MIN or MAX).

For instance, to sort users with the highest number of posts, you can do this:

$users = User::orderByPowerJoinsCount('posts.id', 'desc')->get();

Or, to get the list of posts where the comments contain the highest average of votes.

$posts = Post::orderByPowerJoinsAvg('comments.votes', 'desc')->get();

You also have methods for SUM, MIN and MAX:

Post::orderByPowerJoinsSum('comments.votes');
Post::orderByPowerJoinsMin('comments.votes');
Post::orderByPowerJoinsMax('comments.votes');

In case you want to use left joins in sorting, you also can:

Post::orderByLeftPowerJoinsCount('comments.votes');
Post::orderByLeftPowerJoinsAvg('comments.votes');
Post::orderByLeftPowerJoinsSum('comments.votes');
Post::orderByLeftPowerJoinsMin('comments.votes');
Post::orderByLeftPowerJoinsMax('comments.votes');

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Security

If you discover any security related issues, please email luis@kirschbaumdevelopment.com or nathan@kirschbaumdevelopment.com instead of using the issue tracker.

Credits

Sponsorship

Development of this package is sponsored by Kirschbaum Development Group, a developer driven company focused on problem solving, team building, and community. Learn more about us or join us!

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.

Laravel Package Boilerplate

This package was generated using the Laravel Package Boilerplate.

About

The Laravel magic you know, now applied to joins.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 100.0%