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Home/ Questions/Q 3442608
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T08:41:23+00:00 2026-05-18T08:41:23+00:00

Say I have a User model, a Task model that belongs_to :user , :has_one

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Say I have a User model, a Task model that belongs_to :user, :has_one :event, has a completed boolean attribute, and an Event model that is created when a task is completed, and also belongs_to :event.

In the TaskObserver I’ve noticed that instead of

# app/controllers/task_observer.rb
class TaskObserver < ActiveRecord::Observer
def after_update(task)
  def after_update
    task.create_event(:user=>task.user) if task.completed?
  end
end

I could write

task.create_event(:user_id=>task.user.id)

or even

task.create_event(:user_id=>task.user_id)

While the first way seems the most correct, are there benefits to using either of the latter variations?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T08:41:24+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 8:41 am

    In this specific case I went with task.create_event(:user_id=>task.user_id). By running:

    $ rails c
    ruby-1.8.7-p299 > ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
    ruby-1.8.7-p299 > Task.where("user_id IS NOT NULL).user.id
    ...
    User Load (1.2ms)  SELECT `users`.* FROM `users` WHERE (`users`.`id` = 103) LIMIT 1
    => 103
    

    you can see that Rails will actually load the User from the database. Even if it was cached, I don’t see why I should handle the actual objects if I’m just copying a reference.

    So in general, I think it’s preferred to use objects when you’ve used them before, and IDs when you didn’t and don’t plan to.

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