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I am working on a shopping cart app and have a order model. I added shipping details to my order model to include carrier, tracking_number and ship_date. I created a method called updateshipping in order to have a different redirect after updating the order.

I'm new to rails so not sure if possible to have a conditional redirect in rails after save, or if I should create a custom route to access the updateshipping method (what I tried), or if correct answer is that I should create a new model to hold the shipping details.

I tried to redirect the form partial to update via the method updateshipping but the submit button doesn't work. When I hover over the submit button the url doesn't appear. When I hit Submit it appears to reload the form partial. If I remove everything after @order in the form_for it correctly goes to the update order/update method so I assuming my is issue is on the form_for line (or that is part of the order model in the first place.)

<%= form_for(@order, :url => shipment_path, :html => { :method => "put" }) do |f| %>

  <%= render 'shared/error_messages', object: f.object %>

  <%= f.label :carrier %>
  <%= f.text_field :carrier %>

  <%= f.label :tracking_number, "Tracking #" %>
  <%= f.text_field :tracking_number %>

  <div class="form-actions">
    <%= f.submit "Save changes", class: "btn btn-warning" %>
  </div>
<% end %>

Orders Controller

def updateshipping
  raise params.inspect  (code to update the order will come later)
end

Rake Routes

shipment        /shipmentdetails/:id(.:format)         orders#shipment_details
shipment PUT    /shipmentdetails/:id(.:format)         orders#updateshipping

routes.rb

match '/shipmentdetails/:id' => 'orders#shipment_details', :as => :shipment
match '/shipmentdetails/:id' => 'orders#updateshipping', :as => :shipment, via: :put

Orders Model

class Order < ActiveRecord::Base
  attr_accessible :name, :address, :carrier, :tracking_number, :ship_date
  has_many :line_items, dependent: :destroy
  has_one :user
  has_one :shop

  validates :name, :address, presence: true
end

3 Answers 3

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I'm not sure why this worked but I changed the route that linked to the form partial. I changed the route from:

match '/shipmentdetails/:id' => 'orders#shipment_details', :as => :shipment

to:

match '/shipmentdetails/:id/edit' => 'orders#shipment_details', :as => :edit_shipment

maybe it was getting confused between the shipment_path but I thought that the path from the form_for having the "put" method it should have known to use the following route:

match '/shipmentdetails/:id' => 'orders#updateshipping', :as => :shipment, via: :put

As for the form_for from my original attempt

form_for(@order, :url => shipment_path, :html => { :method => "put" })

it seems to work just like the the recommended

form_for(@order, :url => shipment_path(@order), :html => { :method => "put" })

but I'm not sure if it's a better practice to use shipment_path(@order) instead of just shipment_path.

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Instead of :html => { :method => "put" }, try :method => "put"

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  • I tried this but same result. While testing, it appears the form partial reloads so it might not be recognizing the "put", issue with the match in the route.rb?
    – Steve
    May 22, 2013 at 21:02
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change the form_for line into :

form_for(@order, :url => shipment_path(@order), :html => { :method => "put" })
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  • I tried this but it didn't solve the issue by itself. I think the issue may have been confusion between the path for the edit and the update. Once I modified the route I was able to get it to work using the answer for the form for above as well as my original form_for. I'm not sure which is preferable.
    – Steve
    May 23, 2013 at 19:05

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