I'm trying to follow Ryan Bates RailsCast #196: Nested model form part 1. There're two apparent differences to Ryans version: 1) I'm using built-in scaffolding and not nifty as he's using, and 2) I'm running rails 4 (I don't really know what version Ryans using in his cast, but it's not 4).
So here's what I did
rails new survey2
cd survey2
bundle install
rails generate scaffold survey name:string
rake db:migrate
rails generate model question survey_id:integer content:text
rake db:migrate
Then I added the associations to the models like so
class Question < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :survey
end
and so
class Survey < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :questions
accepts_nested_attributes_for :questions
end
Then I added the nested view part
<%= form_for(@survey) do |f| %>
<!-- Standard rails 4 view stuff -->
<div class="field">
<%= f.label :name %><br>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
</div>
<div class="field">
<%= f.fields_for :questions do |builder| %>
<div>
<%= builder.label :content, "Question" %><br/>
<%= builder.text_area :content, :rows => 3 %>
</div>
<% end %>
</div>
<div class="actions">
<%= f.submit %>
</div>
<% end %>
and finally the controller so that 3 questions are created whenever a new survey is instantiated
class SurveysController < ApplicationController
before_action :set_survey, only: [:show, :edit, :update, :destroy]
# Standard rails 4 index and show
# GET /surveys/new
def new
@survey = Survey.new
3.times { @survey.questions.build }
Rails.logger.debug("New method executed")
end
# GET /surveys/1/edit
def edit
end
# Standard rails 4 create
# PATCH/PUT /surveys/1
# PATCH/PUT /surveys/1.json
def update
respond_to do |format|
if @survey.update(survey_params)
format.html { redirect_to @survey, notice: 'Survey was successfully updated.' }
format.json { head :no_content }
else
format.html { render action: 'edit' }
format.json { render json: @survey.errors, status: :unprocessable_entity }
end
end
end
# Standard rails 4 destroy
private
# Use callbacks to share common setup or constraints between actions.
def set_survey
@survey = Survey.find(params[:id])
end
# Never trust parameters from the scary internet, only allow the white list through.
def survey_params
params.require(:survey).permit(:name, questions_attributes: [:content])
end
end
So, creating a new survey with three questions is fine. However, if I try to edit one of the surveys, the original three questions are maintained, while an additional three more are created. So instead of having 3 questions for the edited survey, I now have 6. I added
Rails.logger.debug("New method executed")
to the new method in the controller, and as far as I can tell, it is not executed when I'm doing an edit operation. Can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong?
Any help is greatly appreciated!
So I figured it out. I had to add :id
to the permitted params in the survey_params
method. It now looks like this:
# Never trust parameters from the scary internet, only allow the white list through.
def survey_params
params.require(:survey).permit(:name, questions_attributes: [:id, :content])
end
which works perfectly. I'm a RoR newbie, so please take my analysis of this with a grain of salt, but I guess that new id's where generated instead of being passed to the update action. Hope this helps someone else out there.