Introduction
In the databases sections, you learned about how a relational database like SQLite3 or PostgreSQL lets you link two tables together using their primary keys – a table’s key that references another table is called a foreign key. It’s the real power of relational databases that they let you leverage these, well, relationships. Active Record takes that feature and lets you use it in all kinds of useful ways. Do you want to get all of your first user’s blog posts? Try User.first.posts
. It’s as simple as that. That functionality doesn’t come out of the box – you need to tell Rails that posts actually belong to a user. This is accomplished with associations.
Lesson overview
This section contains a general overview of topics that you will learn in this lesson.
- What associations are.
- How to specify associations.
- The importance of setting up your data model and how to do it.
- One-to-many relationships.
- Many-to-many relationships.
What are associations?
Associations are Rails’ way of establishing relationships between tables. Conceptually, it makes sense that e.g. a Post would belong to a User. Declaring associations also helps streamline certain operations, such as adding or removing data. For example, once an association has been declared, one can intuitively and explicitly add a new post with @post = @user.posts.create(title: "New Post Title", content: "Content of the new post")
. Or, if we’re interested in a user’s posts, we just have to query the posts table for all posts that link back to that user’s ID, with User.find(user_id).posts
. Additionally, associations are Rails’ way of abstracting away foreign key relationships. On the database table level, every row in the posts table will have a column for user_id
that tells you which user “owns” that post. The users table doesn’t need to acknowledge the posts at all… after all, a single user can have an infinite number of posts.
How to specify an association
Our posts-user example has an aptly named “has many / belongs to” association. A User has_many
Post objects associated with it, and a Post belongs_to
a single User. Rails makes these relationships very easy to specify. You can establish the association between models by defining the association in your model files. Here’s what the associations will look like in your codebase:
In app/models/user.rb
:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts
end
In app/models/post.rb
:
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :user
end
Setting up your data model
Step one with understanding this stuff is just to think about which different types of relationships are possible. Remember, half the battle of setting up your application is understanding what your data relationships will look like, so give this some thought and keep at it when it gets confusing. If your mind is a bit fried right now, start back in the real world and don’t think about it on a database level – remember, all this stuff is our attempt to reflect the kinds of relationships that can occur in the real world.
One-to-many relationships
The has_many
/ belongs_to
, or a “one-to-many”, relationship is pretty common, and usually easiest to think of in terms of actual objects… a Child can have many Marble objects, each of which belongs to that Child. But it also applies in slightly less intuitive cases, like where a single object belongs_to
multiple other objects. An example would be a FranchiseLocation for a McDonalds, which belongs_to
the Corporation McDonalds but might also belongs_to
the City San Francisco.
It’s clear that it should belong to its corporate parent, but why does it belong to a City too? It’s often easier to think of it from the opposite perspective – a City can certainly have many FranchiseLocation objects. As long as a FranchiseLocation can only be in a single city, it effectively “belongs_to” that city in the way that Rails describes it.
A key distinction here is that we’re not talking about how many Post objects a User currently has or how many FranchiseLocation objects a City currently has, we’re trying to model how many they COULD have over the entire lifetime of your application. Sure, if your User only has one Post now, you could reference that post’s ID in your user table. Then when he has another Post, you’d have to create another table column to fit that ID. And another. And another. Which doesn’t make a lick of sense… so that’s why we say the User has_many :posts
and let the Posts table reference in the User’s ID, since a post will only ever have one User associated with it (assuming you only have one author).
Many-to-many relationships
Another common relationship is the many-to-many relationship, which can also be called has_and_belongs_to_many
in Rails terms. This often comes up in actual relationships – a Human can have many favorite Dog objects, and each Dog object can have many favorite Human objects. In this case, how would you specify which Dog objects are your favorites? It actually requires you to create another table (a join table, or “through” table) that specifically keeps track of all those relationships. It’s a bit wonky to understand when you’re learning but it becomes second nature once you’ve been at it for a short while.
Conclusion
Pretty soon you’ll start thinking of the world around you in terms of these relationships (if you don’t take enough breaks). The real power of them comes when you actually need to use them – when you want to retrieve data about all the objects that are associated with another. Do you want to see a list of all your X (formerly known as Twitter) followers? Do you want to count up all the classmates you had from high school who are living in the same city as you now? Do you want to see all the comments one of your users left on another user’s timelines? All of these things are relatively simple and intuitive once you’ve actually set up the appropriate data relationships. So focus on understanding these relationships.
Active Record is the most powerful part of Rails and also one of the trickiest to get the hang of. You need to be able to translate the real world into database tables, which takes a bit of time to become familiar with. The most difficult concepts for new beginners are usually associations, which you’ll learn in upcoming lessons.
It’s easiest to start thinking about concrete relationships in the real world and then turning them into Active Record associations. Once you’re comfortable with which model has_many
of which other model and who actually belongs_to
the other, you can start modeling more abstract concepts like, say, event invitations and invitation acceptances, which aren’t as straightforward as a Child and his marbles (the example we used above).
It’s all about practice, so the projects from here on out will ask you to think through your model organization before getting started. Taking a few minutes to think through your relationships ahead of time is essential for getting started in the right direction when you begin writing code.
Assignment
If you’re a normal human, you’re probably somewhere between “huh?” and “I hate you, stop teaching me stuff”. Stick with it, the point here is to get you thinking of how to model relationships and give you exposure to them. The project will give you an opportunity to actually build what you’ve been learning and it should be a lot better once you’ve had that chance.
- Read the beginning of the Rails Guides Associations Chapter, just up until section 2.7. Everything after that we can save for later… the important thing is that you’ve seen the relationships and how they’re set up.
Knowledge check
The following questions are an opportunity to reflect on key topics in this lesson. If you can’t answer a question, click on it to review the material, but keep in mind you are not expected to memorize or master this knowledge.
Additional resources
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