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Home/ Questions/Q 766815
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T17:06:32+00:00 2026-05-14T17:06:32+00:00

named_scope :correct, :include => :correction, :conditions => checked_at IS NOT NULL AND corrections.id IS

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named_scope :correct, :include => :correction, :conditions => "checked_at IS NOT NULL AND corrections.id IS NULL"

On a side note I have googled loads and looked through books but i cant seem to find a list of all the various types of conditions you can use and how they differ when implenting them as strings, arrays or hashes.

Is there a list of the syntax anywhere?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T17:06:33+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 5:06 pm

    The string you posted is correct. Also, there’s no way to express the same condition using arrays or hashes.

    Array–syntax and Hash-syntax are useful when you need to interpolate values. For instance, the following condition

    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => "field = '1'"
    

    can be written as

    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => ["field = ?", "1"]
    

    or

    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => { :field => "1" }
    

    The Hash-syntax is a subset of the Array-syntax and supports only a limited set of operators.
    For instance, you can transform

    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => ["field1 = ? AND field2 IN (?)", "1", ["foo", "bar"]]
    

    into

    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => { :field1 => "1", :field2 => ["foo", "bar"] }
    

    but there’s no Hash-equivalent for

    # OR
    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => ["field1 = ? OR field2 IN (?)", "1", ["foo", "bar"]]
    # <>
    named_scope :is_one, :conditions => ["field1 <> ?", "1"]
    
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