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Home/ Questions/Q 967225
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T02:16:54+00:00 2026-05-16T02:16:54+00:00

I have a model, Foo, that has_many Bars. It has a virtual attribute, current_baz,

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I have a model, Foo, that has_many Bars. It has a virtual attribute, current_baz, that returns the baz attribute of the latest Bar from the association (if one exists). I’d like to define Foo.current_baz= so that one can say my_foo.update_attributes(:current_baz => 7), and in particular, I’d like it to work when a new Foo is created. That way I can say

Foo.new(:current_baz => 7, ...)

and it should do

self.bars.build(:baz => 7)

Of course, it doesn’t work, because the new Foo doesn’t have an id yet and thus the new Bar isn’t valid. I know how to work around this in a controller, creating first the Foo and then the Bar and wrapping both in a transaction. But I’d really like to keep this logic in the model if possible. It seems almost possible. Does anyone have any suggestions?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T02:16:54+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 2:16 am

    There are a few ways to do this, but one way that I’ve done in the past (particularly if you can rely on there being only one new bar object at a time is to make an instance variable for the unsaved bar, inside foo. So then, to sketch that out, you’d say:

    if self.new?
      @new_bar = bar.new
      @new_bar.baz = new_current_baz_value
    else
      self.bars.build(:baz => 7)
    end
    

    Then, you add an after_save handler that says

    if @new_bar
      @new_bar.foo = self
      @new_bar.save
      @new_bar = nil
    end
    

    Then, finally, when you call current_baz, you need to test for the existenceof a new_bar, like so:

    if @new_bar
      return @new_bar.baz
    else
      return self.bars.last.baz
    end
    

    Does that make sense?

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