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Home/ Questions/Q 424001
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T19:14:11+00:00 2026-05-12T19:14:11+00:00

I’m working on a RoR app, but this is a general question of strategy

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I’m working on a RoR app, but this is a general question of strategy for OOP. Consider the case where there are multiple types of references that you are storing data for: Books, Articles, Presentations, Book Chapters, etc. Each type of reference is part of a hierarchy where common behaviors sit at the most general point of inheritance, and at the DB level I am using single-table inheritance. The type is set by use of a select option, so lets say that I was entering the data as if it were a Book, but then realize that it is only a chapter. So I change the type of reference by selecting “Book Chapter”, which then posts an update to the existing model/form. The question is what is the correct strategy for handling this?

On one hand it seems preferable to transform the existing record in the DB to avoid id exhaustion, and potentially save on operations for creating/deleting records. This however tends to make the update strategy complex.

On the other hand, it seems more in keeping with general object orientation to create a new object (and record) using the old object to initialize values that you want to persist, then delete the old object. This I think makes more sense in terms of an Object Space (heap), and I think is more aligned to ideas like those of general systems.

However, I haven’t nailed this down, and after sitting on it for a while, I’m pitching it to this community to see what “right” way to do this is.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T19:14:12+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 7:14 pm

    Prefer immutable objects, in other words: the second strategy. Your objects may not be immutable by themselves, but reducing mutability is often a step in the right direction.

    Besides that, this is the more natural way. In general OOP terms there’s no way to change the type of an object. In your situation you can, but it’s still an awkward and unusual thing to do.

    On the other hand, if your objects are represented by the same (identical) class and changing the type is done by setting a high-level property, one could argue that re-creating the object is overkill.

    Still, reducing mutability is a good think, but if your class is already designed to be mutable, it might not be worth it. (In that special case where there’s actually only one actual class from the language point of view)

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