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Home/ Questions/Q 8147549
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T14:23:23+00:00 2026-06-06T14:23:23+00:00

I have the following code: def maturities InfoItem.find_all_by_work_order(self.work_order).map(&:maturity) end I was thinking about changing

  • 0

I have the following code:

def maturities
  InfoItem.find_all_by_work_order(self.work_order).map(&:maturity)
end

I was thinking about changing it to:

def maturities
  InfoItem.where(work_order: self.work_order).map(&:maturity)
end

Would there be any advantage to this? It seems like .where is more common than find_all_by nowadays.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T14:23:24+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 2:23 pm

    My opinion is that using .where is a better approach.

    When you use attribute based finders, you are going to have to tunnel through a method missing call and eventually define a class method, via class_eval, that returns your result. This is extra processing that you may not need to do.

    Also, stringing together: find_by_this_and_this_and_this_and_this… can get ugly.

    See how rails accomplishes attribute based finders here

    Method missing from module DynamicMatchers on github:

    def method_missing(name, *arguments, &block)
      match = Method.match(self, name)
    
      if match && match.valid?
        match.define
        send(name, *arguments, &block)
      else
        super
      end
    end
    
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