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Write a migration with reference to a model twice

I have a message model (Message) and this models as a userTo and userFrom, so two references to User. How can i write the migration? My user model is User.

Thank you

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Sebastien Avatar asked Dec 21 '22 07:12

Sebastien


1 Answers

Here's a complete answer to this issue, in case people visiting this question are having a hard time putting everything together (as I was when I first looked into this).

Some parts of the answer take place in your Migrations and some in your Models:

Migrations

class CreateMessages < ActiveRecord::Migration
  create_table :messages do |t|
    def up
      t.references :sender
      t.references :recipient
    end
  end
end

Here you are specifying that there are two columns in this table that will be referred to as :sender and :recipient and which hold references to another table. Rails will actually create columns called 'sender_id' and 'recipient_id' for you. In our case they will each reference rows in the Users table, but we specify that in the models, not in the migrations.

Models

class Message < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :sender, :class_name => 'User'
  belongs_to :recipient, :class_name => 'User'
end

Here you are creating a property on the Message model named :sender, then specifying that this property will be referencing an instance of the User class. Rails, seeing the "belongs_to", will look for a column in your database called "sender_id", which we defined above, and use that to store the foreign key. Then you're doing the exact same thing for the recipient.

This will allow you to access your Sender and Recipient, both instances of the User model, through an instance of the Message model, like this:

@message.sender.name
@message.recipient.email

Here is your User Model:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :sent_messages, :class_name => 'Message', :foreign_key => 'sender_id'
  has_many :received_messages, :class_name => 'Message', :foreign_key => 'recipient_id'
end

Here you are creating a property on the User Model named :sent_messages, specifying that this property is related to the Message Model, and that the foreign key on the Message model which relates to this property is called 'sender_id'. Then you are doing the same thing for received messages.

This allows you to get all of a users sent or received messages by doing something like this:

@user.sent_messages
@user.received_messages

Doing either of these will return an array of instances of the Message model.

like image 116
Richard Jones Avatar answered Dec 31 '22 03:12

Richard Jones