I have a class that looks something like this:
class User < ActiveRecord:Base
has_many :users_companies
has_many :companies, :through => :users_companies
end
For plain users, I’d like user.companies to refer to the standard association method, but when a user is an admin, I want User.all (i.e., admins have access to all companies). The simplest way I can think of to implement this (and what I’ve always done in the past) is use a scope on the Company class, such as:
scope :accessible_by, lambda { |user| ... }
The only problem is that this just doesn’t feel right. Instead of writing a controller action that includes:
@companies = Company.accessible_by(current_user)
I’d feel more comfortable writing
@companies = current_user.companies
Is there a good way to override the User#companies method to accommodate this kind of behavior? Or, should I be happy with using a scope on Company?
I’m wrestling with a similar problem. The only acceptable solution I can devise is an association extension, which overrides the query for admin users and passes normal users’ queries, unmolested.