A different approach from the answer provided by @mrhn is to create a custom relationship. Brent from Spatie did an excellent article about it
Although my answer will do the exact same queries than the one provided by staudenmeir's package it makes me realized that either you use the package, this answer or @mrhn answer, you may avoid the n+1 queries but you may still ends up will a large amount of hydrated models.
In this scenario, I don't think it's possible to avoid one or the other approach. The cache could be an answer though.
Since I'm not entirely sure about your schema, I will provide my solution using the users-photos example from my previous answer.
User.php
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class User extends Model
{
public function photos()
{
return $this->belongsToMany(Photo::class);
}
public function latestPhoto()
{
return new \App\Relations\LatestPhotoRelation($this);
}
}
LastestPhotoRelation.php
<?php
namespace App\Relations;
use App\Models\User;
use App\Models\Photo;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Relation;
class LatestPhotoRelation extends Relation
{
/** @var Photo|Builder */
protected $query;
/** @var User */
protected $user;
public function __construct(User $user)
{
parent::__construct(Photo::query(), $user);
}
/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function addConstraints()
{
$this->query
->join(
'user_photo',
'user_photo.photo_id',
'=',
'photos.id'
)->latest();
// if you have an ambiguous column name error you can use
// `->latest('movement_movement_steps.created_at');`
}
/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function addEagerConstraints(array $users)
{
$this->query
->whereIn(
'user_photo.user_id',
collect($users)->pluck('id')
);
}
/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function initRelation(array $users, $relation)
{
foreach ($users as $user) {
$user->setRelation(
$relation,
null
);
}
return $users;
}
/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function match(array $users, Collection $photos, $relation)
{
if ($photos->isEmpty()) {
return $users;
}
foreach ($users as $user) {
$user->setRelation(
$relation,
$photos->filter(function (Photo $photo) use ($user) {
return $photo->user_id === $user->id; // `user_id` came with the `join` on `user_photo`
})->first() // Photos are already DESC ordered from the query
);
}
return $users;
}
/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function getResults()
{
return $this->query->get();
}
}
Usage
$users = \App\Models\User::with('latestPhoto')->limit(5)->get();
The main difference from Brent's article, is that instead of using a Collection
we are returning the latest Photo Model
.