Just curious, I spent an embarrassing amount of time trying to get an array of all the records in a nested model. I just want to make sure there is not a better way.
Here is the setup:
I have three models that are nested under each other (Facilities >> Tags >> Inspections), producing code like this for routes.rb:
map.resources :facilities do |facilities|
facilities.resources :tags, :has_many => :inspections
end
I wanted to get all of the inspections for a facility and here is what my code ended up being:
def facility_inspections
@facility = Facility.find(params[:facility_开发者_如何学Goid])
@inspections = []
@facility.tags.each do |tag|
tag.inspections.each do |inspection|
@inspections << inspection
end
end
end
It works but is this the best way to do this - I think it's cumbersome.
You can use has_many :through
association. In your models:
# Facility model
has_many :tags
has_many :inspections, :through => :tags
# Tag model
belongs_to :facility
has_many :inspections
And you can get all inspections like this:
@inspections = Facility.find(params[:facility_id]).inspections
But if you have HABTM relation between Facility and Tag it will be more complicated and you would have to write some sql manualy, like this:
@inspections = Inspection.all(:joins => "INNER JOIN tags ON tags.id = inspections.tag_id INNER JOIN facilities_tags ON tags.id = facilities_tags.tag_id", :conditions => ["facilities_tags.facility_id = ?", params[:facility_id] )
Of course above code depends on your table structure. If you will show it, then it would be easier to give correct answer :). Hope it helps!
@facility = Facility.find(params[:facility_id], :include => {:tags => :inspections})
This executes one query against the database (your original solution would use many of them), and returns a facility object with all the tag and inspections included. Then you can do something like:
@inspections = @facility.tags.map(&:inspections).flatten
精彩评论