Just starting to learn Ruby on Rails. I’m using RoR 3. I have read this: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/association_basics.html
But I want to make sure I understand completely.
When creating a new model (I’m doing via scaffold for now), should I specify foreign_key fields at that point, or does the association handle that completely? I believe that association is only at app level, not at the db level, correct?
So I think I must do:
rails generate scaffold post body:text title:string user_id:integer
So in summary, when creating a blog application, must I specify the user_id field in the post model, or does the user model’s has_many :posts take care of actually adding that to the db (mine is mysql) when I migrate?
And if the answer is that I should do them when I create the model in the first place (via scaffold or by hand), what happens when I decide later on that I want to add a foreign key, must I add that as an execute statement in a new migration?
You’re correct. You need to specify the foreign key when you create your scaffold/model/migration as you stated to get the DB to be correct, and the has_many takes cares of the model for you.
So for initial generation of a scaffold (or model), just do:
as you stated, and add the
has_manyfor the model itself.For additions later on, you would make up a new migration, something like (assuming you want to use generation, but you could write your own migration):
With that, you can run a
rake db:migrate, and then update your model with ahas_manyor whatever association you need.