Lets say there is a activerecord class called user, which is representative of user table of database.
But I have different type of users which have
- special functions
- special variables
- custom relations (Employer has_many companies, Employee belongs_to company :)
But also these users have a lot of functionality in co开发者_Go百科mmon. So what I want to do is create classes for each different type of user then inherit them from user class.
- User < ActiveRecord::Base
- Employer < User
- Employee < User
- Customer < User
What is the best way of doing something like that?
Thanks
A lot of applications start out with a User
model of some sort. Over time, as different kinds of users emerge, it might make sense to make a greater distinction between them. Admin
and Guest
classes are introduced, as subclasses of User
. Now, the shared behavior can reside in User
, and subtype behavior can be pushed down to subclasses. However, all user data can still reside in the users table.
All you need to do is add a type
column to the users
table that will hold the name of the class to be instantiated for a given row. Active Record takes care of instantiating the kind of object when it loads it from the database.
This technique is called Single Table Inheritance or STI (for short).
A very good recent article about STI is here: http://code.alexreisner.com/articles/single-table-inheritance-in-rails.html
Have a look to this thread on models subclassing:
Subclassing models in Rails
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