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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T11:52:57+00:00 2026-05-11T11:52:57+00:00

I have a list of ‘request’ objects, each of which has fairly normal activerecord

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I have a list of ‘request’ objects, each of which has fairly normal activerecord qualities. The requests table is related to the games table with a join table, ‘games_requests,’ so that a request has a request.games array.

The question is, is there a way to do a find for the last n unique requests, where uniqueness is defined by the games column and a couple others, but specifically ignores other colums (like the name of the requesting user?)

I saw a syntax like ‘find (:all, :limit=>5, :include=>[:games,:stage])’ but that was returning duplicates.

Thanks…

EDIT: Thanks to chaos for a great response. You got me really close, but I still need the returns to be valid request objects: the first 5 records that are distinct in the requested rows. I could just use the find as you constructed it and then do a second find for the first row in the table that matches each of the sets returned by the first find.

EDIT:

Games.find(     :all, :limit => 5,     :include => [:games, :requests],     :group => 'games, whatever, whatever_else' ) 

…gives an SQL error:

Mysql::Error: Unknown column 'games' in 'group statement': SELECT * FROM `games`  GROUP BY games 

I made a few changes for what I assumed to be correct for my project; getting a list of requests instead of games, etc:

Request.find(     :all, :order=>'id DESC', :limit=>5,     :include=>[:games],   #including requests here generates an sql error     :group=>'games, etc'  #mysql error:  games isn't an attribute of requests     :conditions=>'etc' ) 

I’m thinking I’m going to have to use the :join=> option here.

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  1. 2026-05-11T11:52:58+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 11:52 am
    Games.find(     :all, :limit => 5,     :include => [:games, :requests],     :group => 'games, whatever, whatever_else' ) 
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