Rails Polymorphic has_many

旧巷老猫 提交于 2019-11-30 08:41:42

You have to use STI on the producers, not on the products. This way you have different behavior for each type of producer, but in a single producers table.

(almost) No polymorphism at all!

class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
  # does not have a 'type' column, so there is no STI here,
  # it is like an abstract superclass.
  belongs_to :producer
end

class Bicycle < Product
end

class Popsicle < Product
end

class Producer < ActiveRecord::Base
  # it has a 'type' column so we have STI here!!
end

class BicycleProducer < Producer
  has_many :products, :class_name => "Bicycle", :inverse_of => :producer
end

class PopsicleProducer < Producer
  has_many :products, :class_name => "Popsicle", :inverse_of => :producer
end
user386660

please take it on format

class Bicycle < ActiveRecord::Base 
  belongs_to :bicycle_obj,:polymorphic => true 
end 

class Popsicle < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :popsicle_obj , :polymorphic => true 
end 

class Producer < ActiveRecord::Base 
  has_many :bicycles , :as=>:bicycle_obj 
  has_many :popsicle , :as=>:popsicle_obj 
end 

Use this code. If you have any problem with it, please leave a comment.

Here is the workaround I'm currently using. It doesn't provide any of the convenience methods (collection operations) that you get from real ActiveRecord::Associations, but it does provide a way to get the list of products for a given producer:

class Bicycle < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :producer
end

class Popsicle < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :producer
end

class Producer < ActiveRecord::Base
  PRODUCT_TYPE_MAPPING = {
    'bicycle' => Bicycle,
    'popsicle' => Popsicle
  }.freeze
  def products
    klass = PRODUCT_TYPE_MAPPING[self.type]
    klass ? klass.find_all_by_producer_id(self.id) : []
  end
end

Another downside is that I must maintain the mapping of type strings to type classes but that could be automated. However, this solution will suffice for my purposes.

I find that polymorphic associations is under documented in Rails. There is a single table inheritance schema, which is what gets the most documentation, but if you are not using single table inheritance, then there is some missing information.

The belongs_to association can be enabled using the :polymorphic => true option. However, unless you are using single table inheritance, the has_many association does not work, because it would need to know the set of tables that could have a foreign key.

(From what I found), I think the clean solution is to have a table and model for the base class, and have the foreign key in the base table.

create_table "products", :force => true do |table|
    table.integer  "derived_product_id"
    table.string   "derived_product_type"
    table.integer  "producer_id"
  end

  class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
    belongs_to :producer
  end

  class Producer < ActiveRecord::Base
    has_many :products
  end

Then, for a Production object, producer, you should get the products with producer.products.derived_products.

I have not yet played with has_many through to condense the association to producer.derived_products, so I cannot comment on getting that to work.

user386660
class Note < ActiveRecord::Base

 belongs_to :note_obj, :polymorphic => true
 belongs_to :user


end


class Contact < ActiveRecord::Base

 belongs_to :contact_obj, :polymorphic => true
 belongs_to :phone_type 

end



class CarrierHq < ActiveRecord::Base


 has_many :contacts, :as => :contact_obj
 has_many :notes, :as => :note_obj


end
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