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Home/ Questions/Q 8461121
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T13:47:33+00:00 2026-06-10T13:47:33+00:00

I’ve got users and organisations with a join model UsersOrganisation. Users may be admins

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I’ve got users and organisations with a join model UsersOrganisation. Users may be admins of Organisations – if so the is_admin boolean is true.

If I set the is_admin boolean by hand in the database, Organisations.admins works as I’d expect.

In the console, I can do Organisation.first.users << User.first and it creates an organisations_users entry as I’d expect.

However if I do Organisation.first.admins << User.last it creates a normal user, not an admin, ie the is_admin boolean on the join table is not set correctly.

Is there a good way of doing this other than creating entries in the join table directly?

class User < ActiveRecord::Base

  has_many :organisations_users
  has_many :organisations, :through => :organisations_users

end

class Organisation <  ActiveRecord::Base

  has_many :organisations_users
  has_many :users, :through => :organisations_users
  has_many :admins, :through => :organisations_users, :class_name => "User", 
            :source => :user, 
            :conditions => {:organisations_users => {:is_admin => true}}

end

class OrganisationsUser < ActiveRecord::Base

  belongs_to :organisation
  belongs_to :user

end
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T13:47:34+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 1:47 pm

    there are some twists with the has_many :through and the << operator. But you could overload it like in @Erez answer.

    My approach to this is using scopes (I renamed OrganisationsUsers to Memberships):

    class User < ActiveRecord::Base
    
      has_many :memberships
      has_many :organisations, :through => :memberships
    
    end
    
    class Organisation <  ActiveRecord::Base
      has_many :memberships
      has_many :members, :through => :memberships, :class_name => 'User', :source => :user
    
      # response to comment:
      def admins 
        memberships.admin
      end
    end
    
    class Memberships < ActiveRecord::Base
    
      belongs_to :organisation
      belongs_to :user
    
      scope :admin, where(:is_admin => true)
    end
    

    Now I create new admins like this:

    Organisation.first.memberships.admin.create(:user => User.first)
    

    What I like about the scopes is that you define the “kind of memberships” in the membership class, and the organisation itself doesn’t have to care about the kinds of memberships at all.

    Update:

    Now you can do

    Organisation.first.admins.create(:user => User.first)

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