Easily connect to airtable data using ruby with access to all of the airtable features.
We are currently transitioning this gem to be supported by Airtable. We will maintain it moving forward, but until we fully support it, it will stay in the status of "community libraries". At that time we will remove this notice and add a "ruby" section to the API docs.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'airtable'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install airtable
First, be sure to register for an airtable account, create a data worksheet and get an api key. Now, setup your Airtable client:
# Pass in api key to client
@client = Airtable::Client.new("keyPCx5W")
Your API key carries the same privileges as your user account, so be sure to keep it secret!
Now we can access any table in our Airsheet account by referencing the API docs:
# Pass in the app key and table name
@table = @client.table("appPo84QuCy2BPgLk", "Table Name")
Once you have access to a table from above, we can query a set of records in the table with:
@records = @table.records
We can specify a sort
order, limit
, and offset
as part of our query:
@records = @table.records(:sort => ["Name", :asc], :limit => 50)
@records # => [#<Airtable::Record :name=>"Bill Lowry", :email=>"[email protected]">, ...]
@records.offset #=> "itrEN2TCbrcSN2BMs"
This will return the records based on the query as well as an offset
for the next round of records. We can then access the contents of any record:
@bill = @record.first
# => #<Airtable::Record :name=>"Bill Lowry", :email=>"[email protected]", :id=>"rec02sKGVIzU65eV1">
@bill[:id] # => "rec02sKGVIzU65eV2"
@bill[:name] # => "Bill Lowry"
@bill[:email] # => "[email protected]"
Note that you can only request a maximimum of 100 records in a single query. To retrieve more records, use the "batch" feature below.
We can also query all records in the table through a series of batch requests with:
@records = @table.all(:sort => ["Name", :asc])
This executes a variable number of network requests (100 records per batch) to retrieve all records in a sheet.
We can also use select
method to query based on specific conditions using formula
parameter
@records = @table.select(sort: ["Order", "asc"], formula: "Active = 1")
This will return all the records that has Active
column value as true
from table.
Records can be queried by id
using the find
method on a table:
@record = @table.find("rec02sKGVIzU65eV2")
# => #<Airtable::Record :name=>"Bill Lowry", :email=>"[email protected]", :id=>"rec02sKGVIzU65eV1">
Records can be inserted using the create
method on a table:
@record = Airtable::Record.new(:name => "Sarah Jaine", :email => "[email protected]")
@table.create(@record)
# => #<Airtable::Record :name=>"Sarah Jaine", :email=>"[email protected]", :id=>"rec03sKOVIzU65eV4">
Records can be updated using the update
method on a table:
@record[:email] = "[email protected]"
@table.update(record)
# => #<Airtable::Record :name=>"Sarah Jaine", :email=>"[email protected]", :id=>"rec03sKOVIzU65eV4">
Records can be destroyed using the destroy
method on a table:
@table.destroy(record)
- Fork it ( https://github.com/nesquena/airtable-ruby/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request