class Notification < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :user belongs_to :topic validates_presence_of :data validates_presence_of :notification_type scope :unread, lambda { where(read: false) } scope :recent, lambda { order('created_at desc').limit(10) } def self.Types {:mentioned => 1, :replied => 2, :quoted => 3, :edited => 4, :liked => 5, :private_message => 6, :invited_to_private_message => 7, :invitee_accepted => 8, :posted => 9, :moved_post => 10} end def self.InvertedTypes @inverted_types ||= Notification.Types.invert end def self.mark_posts_read(user, topic_id, post_numbers) Notification.update_all "read = 't'", user_id: user.id, topic_id: topic_id, post_number: post_numbers, read: false end def self.interesting_after(min_date) result = where("created_at > ?", min_date) .includes(:topic) .unread .limit(20) .order("CASE WHEN notification_type = #{Notification.Types[:replied]} THEN 1 WHEN notification_type = #{Notification.Types[:mentioned]} THEN 2 ELSE 3 END, created_at DESC").to_a # Remove any duplicates by type and topic if result.present? seen = {} to_remove = Set.new result.each do |r| seen[r.notification_type] ||= Set.new if seen[r.notification_type].include?(r.topic_id) to_remove << r.id else seen[r.notification_type] << r.topic_id end end result.reject! {|r| to_remove.include?(r.id) } end result end # Be wary of calling this frequently. O(n) JSON parsing can suck. def data_hash @data_hash ||= begin return nil if data.blank? JSON.parse(data).with_indifferent_access end end def text_description link = block_given? ? yield : "" I18n.t("notification_types.#{Notification.InvertedTypes[notification_type]}", data_hash.merge(link: link)) end def url if topic.present? return topic.relative_url(post_number) end end def post return if topic_id.blank? || post_number.blank? Post.where(topic_id: topic_id, post_number: post_number).first end end