Say I'm running a blog-type application. I've got a Users table, and
a Posts table. Each post on the blog is made by a user. The Post
table has an FK user_id that keeps track of the author of the post.
This is all well and good, but I've found myself doing this a lot:
class Post
def get_author_name
user = User.find(user_id)
user.name
end
end
which definitely works for retrieving the author name when I'm
rendering my view, but I'm worried I'm going to be weaving my classes
too tightly, especially given how often this type of scenario can come
up.
Does anyone have a better approach?
Thanks!
Then you can do post.user.name retrieve the name of the author of the
post
--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
class Post
has_one :user
end
I guess the real question is - what's the difference between has_one
and belongs_to?
The location of the foreign key. Go read the Associations docs.
Best,
--
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
mar...@marnen.org
belongs_to means the foreign key is an attribute of this model. has_one/has_many means it's an attribute of the associated model.
On Feb 10, 2010 8:47 AM, "robo" <chase.dela...@gmail.com> wrote:
That's handy! Does that work too if I say
class Post
has_one :user
end
I guess the real question is - what's the difference between has_one
and belongs_to?
On Feb 10, 4:44 am, Sharagoz -- <li...@ruby-forum.com> wrote:
> class Post
> belongs_to :user
> e...
> Posted viahttp://www.ruby-forum.com/.
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