View Source Ecto.Queryable protocol (Ecto v3.12.5)

Converts a data structure into an Ecto.Query.

This is used by Ecto.Repo and also from macro. For example, Repo.all expects any queryable as argument, which is why you can do Repo.all(MySchema) or Repo.all(query). Furthermore, when you write from ALIAS in QUERYABLE, QUERYABLE accepts any data structure that implements Ecto.Queryable.

This module defines a few default implementations so let us go over each and how to use them.

Atom

The most common use case for this protocol is to convert atoms representing an Ecto.Schema module into a query. This is what happens when you write:

query = from(p in Person)

Or when you directly pass a schema to a repository:

Repo.all(Person)

In case you did not know, Elixir modules are just atoms. This implementation takes the provided module name and then tries to load the associated schema. If no schema exists, it will raise Protocol.UndefinedError.

BitString

This implementation allows you to directly specify a table that you would like to query from:

from(
  p in "people",
  select: {p.first_name, p.last_name}
)

Or:

Repo.delete_all("people")

While this is quite simple to use, some repository operations, such as Repo.all, require a select clause. When you query a schema, the select is automatically defined for you based on the schema fields, but when you pass a table directly, you need to explicitly list them. This limitation now brings us to our next implementation!

Tuple

Similar to the BitString implementation, this allows you to specify the underlying table that you would like to query; however, this additionally allows you to specify the schema you would like to use:

from(p in {"filtered_people", Person})

This can be particularly useful if you have database views that filter or aggregate the underlying data of a table but share the same schema. This means that you can reuse the same schema while specifying a separate "source" for the data.

Ecto.Query

This is a simple pass through. After all, all Ecto.Query instances can be converted into Ecto.Query:

Repo.all(from u in User, where: u.active)

This also enables Ecto queries to compose, since we can pass one query as the source of another:

active_users = from u in User, where: u.active
ordered_active_users = from u in active_users, order_by: u.created_at

Ecto.SubQuery

Ecto also allows you to compose queries using subqueries. Imagine you have a table of "people". Now imagine that you want to do something with people with the most common last names. To get that list, you could write something like:

sub = from(
  p in Person,
  group_by: p.last_name,
  having: count(p.last_name) > 1,
  select: %{last_name: p.last_name, count: count(p.last_name)}
)

Now if you want to do something else with this data, perhaps join on additional tables and perform some calculations, you can do that as so:

from(
  p in subquery(sub),
  # other filtering etc here
)

Please note that the Ecto.Query.subquery/2 is needed here to convert the Ecto.Query into an instance of Ecto.SubQuery. This protocol then wraps it into an Ecto.Query, but using the provided subquery in the FROM clause. Please see Ecto.Query.subquery/2 for more information.

Summary

Types

t()

All the types that implement this protocol.

Functions

Converts the given data into an Ecto.Query.

Types

t()

@type t() :: term()

All the types that implement this protocol.

Functions

to_query(data)

Converts the given data into an Ecto.Query.