43 votes

Associations Rails - has_many =>: through - mais même modèle

Ce que j'essaie de faire:

J'ai un blog et je souhaite afficher les messages associés sous le message principal.

 class Post < ActiveRecord::Base

  has_many :related_posts
  has_many :posts, :through => :related_posts

end
 

Et puis dans le modèle / table de jointure

 class RelatedPost < ActiveRecord::Base

  belongs_to :post

end
 

Et bien sûr, il existe une table appelée related_posts avec deux colonnes post_id .

Évidemment, cela présente plusieurs défauts, je ne sais tout simplement pas comment faire fonctionner cette association dans Rails.

61voto

Dogbert Points 44003

C'était une question intéressante.

Je viens de créer une application qui fonctionne pour votre cas d'utilisation.

post.related_posts vous donnera tous les posts liés à post, alors que post.inverse_related_posts vous donnera tous les posts liés à post.

Voici à quoi ressemblent mes modèles:

 class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :related_posts_association, :class_name => "RelatedPost"
  has_many :related_posts, :through => :related_posts_association, :source => :related_post
  has_many :inverse_related_posts_association, :class_name => "RelatedPost", :foreign_key => "related_post_id"
  has_many :inverse_related_posts, :through => :inverse_related_posts_association, :source => :post
end

class RelatedPost < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :post
  belongs_to :related_post, :class_name => "Post"
end
 

Mon schéma:

 ActiveRecord::Schema.define(:version => 20110702194300) do

  create_table "posts", :force => true do |t|
    t.string   "name"
    t.datetime "created_at"
    t.datetime "updated_at"
  end

  create_table "related_posts", :force => true do |t|
    t.integer  "post_id"
    t.integer  "related_post_id"
    t.datetime "created_at"
    t.datetime "updated_at"
  end

end
 

Voici un extrait d'une session de console illustrant la relation.

 ruby-1.9.2-p180:001:0>> p = Post.create! name: "Hello"
  SQL (23.5ms)  INSERT INTO "posts" ("created_at", "name", "updated_at") VALUES (?, ?, ?)  [["created_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:03:43 UTC +00:00], ["name", "Hello"], ["updated_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:03:43 UTC +00:00]]
# => #<Post id: 1, name: "Hello", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43">
ruby-1.9.2-p180:002:0>> p2 = Post.create! name: "World"
  SQL (1.0ms)  INSERT INTO "posts" ("created_at", "name", "updated_at") VALUES (?, ?, ?)  [["created_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:03:48 UTC +00:00], ["name", "World"], ["updated_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:03:48 UTC +00:00]]
# => #<Post id: 2, name: "World", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:48", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:48">
ruby-1.9.2-p180:003:0>> p.related_posts
  Post Load (0.2ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" INNER JOIN "related_posts" ON "posts"."id" = "related_posts"."related_post_id" WHERE "related_posts"."post_id" = 1
# => []
ruby-1.9.2-p180:004:0>> p2.related_posts
  Post Load (0.4ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" INNER JOIN "related_posts" ON "posts"."id" = "related_posts"."related_post_id" WHERE "related_posts"."post_id" = 2
# => []
ruby-1.9.2-p180:005:0>> p.related_posts << p2
  SQL (0.7ms)  INSERT INTO "related_posts" ("created_at", "post_id", "related_post_id", "updated_at") VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)  [["created_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:04:01 UTC +00:00], ["post_id", 1], ["related_post_id", 2], ["updated_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:04:01 UTC +00:00]]
# => [#<Post id: 2, name: "World", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:48", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:48">]
ruby-1.9.2-p180:006:0>> RelatedPost.all
  RelatedPost Load (0.4ms)  SELECT "related_posts".* FROM "related_posts" 
# => [#<RelatedPost id: 1, post_id: 1, related_post_id: 2, created_at: "2011-07-02 20:04:01", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:04:01">]
ruby-1.9.2-p180:007:0>> p2.inverse_related_posts
  Post Load (0.2ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" INNER JOIN "related_posts" ON "posts"."id" = "related_posts"."post_id" WHERE "related_posts"."related_post_id" = 2
# => [#<Post id: 1, name: "Hello", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43">]
ruby-1.9.2-p180:008:0>> p = Post.first
  Post Load (0.5ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" LIMIT 1
# => #<Post id: 1, name: "Hello", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43">
ruby-1.9.2-p180:009:0>> p2.related_posts << p
  SQL (25.7ms)  INSERT INTO "related_posts" ("created_at", "post_id", "related_post_id", "updated_at") VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)  [["created_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:05:29 UTC +00:00], ["post_id", 2], ["related_post_id", 1], ["updated_at", Sat, 02 Jul 2011 20:05:29 UTC +00:00]]
  Post Load (0.3ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" INNER JOIN "related_posts" ON "posts"."id" = "related_posts"."related_post_id" WHERE "related_posts"."post_id" = 2
# => [#<Post id: 1, name: "Hello", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43">]
ruby-1.9.2-p180:010:0>> p2.related_posts
# => [#<Post id: 1, name: "Hello", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43">]
ruby-1.9.2-p180:011:0>> exit


Loading development environment (Rails 3.1.0.rc4)
ruby-1.9.2-p180:001:0>> Post.first.related_posts
  Post Load (0.3ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" LIMIT 1
  Post Load (0.2ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" INNER JOIN "related_posts" ON "posts"."id" = "related_posts"."related_post_id" WHERE "related_posts"."post_id" = 1
# => [#<Post id: 2, name: "World", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:48", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:48">]
ruby-1.9.2-p180:002:0>> Post.last.related_posts
  Post Load (0.2ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" ORDER BY "posts"."id" DESC LIMIT 1
  Post Load (0.2ms)  SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" INNER JOIN "related_posts" ON "posts"."id" = "related_posts"."related_post_id" WHERE "related_posts"."post_id" = 2
# => [#<Post id: 1, name: "Hello", created_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43", updated_at: "2011-07-02 20:03:43">]
 

14voto

apneadiving Points 64660

Vous recherchez une association auto référentielle.

Je vous suggère de vous inspirer ici.

Prograide.com

Prograide est une communauté de développeurs qui cherche à élargir la connaissance de la programmation au-delà de l'anglais.
Pour cela nous avons les plus grands doutes résolus en français et vous pouvez aussi poser vos propres questions ou résoudre celles des autres.

Powered by:

X