可以将文章内容翻译成中文,广告屏蔽插件可能会导致该功能失效(如失效,请关闭广告屏蔽插件后再试):
问题:
Could you tell me whats the best practice to create has_one relations?
f.e. if i have a user model, and it must have a profile...
How could i accomplish that?
One solution would be:
# user.rb
class User << ActiveRecord::Base
after_create :set_default_association
def set_default_association
self.create_profile
end
end
But that doesnt seem very clean... Any suggests?
回答1:
Best practice to create has_one relation is to use the ActiveRecord callback before_create
rather than after_create
. Or use an even earlier callback and deal with the issues (if any) of the child not passing its own validation step.
Because:
- with good coding, you have the opportunity for the child record's validations to be shown to the user if the validations fail
- it's cleaner and explicitly supported by ActiveRecord -- AR automagically fills in the foreign key in the child record after it saves the parent record (on create). AR then saves the child record as part of creating the parent record.
How to do it:
# in your User model...
has_one :profile
before_create :build_default_profile
private
def build_default_profile
# build default profile instance. Will use default params.
# The foreign key to the owning User model is set automatically
build_profile
true # Always return true in callbacks as the normal 'continue' state
# Assumes that the default_profile can **always** be created.
# or
# Check the validation of the profile. If it is not valid, then
# return false from the callback. Best to use a before_validation
# if doing this. View code should check the errors of the child.
# Or add the child's errors to the User model's error array of the :base
# error item
end
回答2:
Your solution is definitely a decent way to do it (at least until you outgrow it), but you can simplify it:
# user.rb
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :profile
after_create :create_profile
end
回答3:
If this is a new association in an existing large database, I'll manage the transition like this:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :profile
before_create :build_associations
def profile
super || build_profile(avatar: "anon.jpg")
end
private
def build_associations
profile || true
end
end
so that existing user records gain a profile when asked for it and new ones are created with it. This also places the default attributes in one place and works correctly with accepts_nested_attributes_for in Rails 4 onwards.
回答4:
Probably not the cleanest solution, but we already had a database with half a million records, some of which already had the 'Profile' model created, and some of which didn't. We went with this approach, which guarantees a Profile model is present at any point, without needing to go through and retroactively generate all the Profile models.
alias_method :db_profile, :profile
def profile
self.profile = Profile.create(:user => self) if self.db_profile.nil?
self.db_profile
end
回答5:
Here's how I do it. Not sure how standard this is, but it works very well and its lazy in that it doesn't create extra overhead unless it's necessary to build the new association (I'm happy to be corrected on this):
def profile_with_auto_build
build_profile unless profile_without_auto_build
profile_without_auto_build
end
alias_method_chain :profile, :auto_build
This also means that the association is there as soon as you need it. I guess the alternative is to hook into after_initialize but this seems to add quite a bit of overhead as it's run every time an object is initialized and there may be times where you don't care to access the association. It seems like a waste to check for its existence.
回答6:
There is a gem for this:
https://github.com/jqr/has_one_autocreate
Looks like it is a bit old now. (not work with rails3)