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Home/ Questions/Q 6659905
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T02:05:19+00:00 2026-05-26T02:05:19+00:00

Can someone tell me if I’m just going about the setup the wrong way?

  • 0

Can someone tell me if I’m just going about the setup the wrong way?

I have the following models that have has_many.through associations:

class Listing < ActiveRecord::Base
  attr_accessible ... 

  has_many :listing_features
  has_many :features, :through => :listing_features

  validates_presence_of ...
  ...  
end


class Feature < ActiveRecord::Base
  attr_accessible ...

  validates_presence_of ...
  validates_uniqueness_of ...

  has_many :listing_features
  has_many :listings, :through => :listing_features
end


class ListingFeature < ActiveRecord::Base
  attr_accessible :feature_id, :listing_id

  belongs_to :feature  
  belongs_to :listing
end

I’m using Rails 3.1.rc4, FactoryGirl 2.0.2, factory_girl_rails 1.1.0, and rspec. Here is my basic rspec rspec sanity check for the :listing factory:

it "creates a valid listing from factory" do
  Factory(:listing).should be_valid
end

Here is Factory(:listing)

FactoryGirl.define do
  factory :listing do
    headline    'headline'
    home_desc   'this is the home description'
    association :user, :factory => :user
    association :layout, :factory => :layout
    association :features, :factory => :feature
  end
end

The :listing_feature and :feature factories are similarly setup.
If the association :features line is commented out, then all my tests pass.
When it is

association :features, :factory => :feature

the error message is
undefined method 'each' for #<Feature> which I thought made sense to me because because listing.features returns an array. So I changed it to

association :features, [:factory => :feature]

and the error I get now is ArgumentError: Not registered: features Is it just not sensible to be generating factory objects this way, or what am I missing? Thanks very much for any and all input!

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T02:05:19+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 2:05 am

    Creating these kinds of associations requires using FactoryGirl’s callbacks.

    A perfect set of examples can be found here.

    https://thoughtbot.com/blog/aint-no-calla-back-girl

    To bring it home to your example.

    Factory.define :listing_with_features, :parent => :listing do |listing|
      listing.after_create { |l| Factory(:feature, :listing => l)  }
      #or some for loop to generate X features
    end
    
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