View Source Expressions
In addition to the expressions listed in the Ash expressions guide, AshPostgres provides the following expressions
Fragments
Fragments allow you to use arbitrary postgres expressions in your queries. Fragments can often be an escape hatch to allow you to do things that don't have something officially supported with Ash.
Examples
Simple expressions
fragment("? / ?", points, count)Calling functions
fragment("repeat('hello', 4)")Using entire queries
fragment("points > (SELECT SUM(points) FROM games WHERE user_id = ? AND id != ?)", user_id, id)a last resort
Using entire queries as shown above is a last resort, but can sometimes be the best way to accomplish a given task.
In calculations
calculations do
calculate :lower_name, :string, expr(
fragment("LOWER(?)", name)
)
endIn migrations
create table(:managers, primary_key: false) do
add :id, :uuid, null: false, default: fragment("UUID_GENERATE_V4()"), primary_key: true
endLike and ILike
These wrap the postgres builtin like and ilike operators.
Please be aware, these match patterns not raw text. Use contains/1 if you want to match text without supporting patterns, i.e % and _ have semantic meaning!
For example:
Ash.Query.filter(User, like(name, "%obo%")) # name contains obo anywhere in the string, case sensitivelyAsh.Query.filter(User, ilike(name, "%ObO%")) # name contains ObO anywhere in the string, case insensitivelyTrigram similarity
To use this expression, you must have the pg_trgm extension in your repos installed_extensions list.
This calls the similarity function from that extension. See more in the pgtrgm guide
For example:
Ash.Query.filter(User, trigram_similarity(first_name, "fred") > 0.8)