I am using Rails STI to model a complex domain. In a view, I am listing all subclasses with:
> <% StateDescription.subclasses.each do |state_description| %> <li>
> <%= state_description.to_s %> </li> <% end %>
With the intent to eventually make each label of the subclass a link to the individual "index" page for just instances of that subclass.
This saves me from having to have a list of all possible subclasses myself (and updating it later if I add more).
However, I have noticed that only those subclasses I have actually loaded from the database show up in the list. If I say StateDescription.all, then all existing subclasses show up (but none that have no instances yet). If I instead ask for all of a particular subclass, then only that subclass show up.
I imagine this is part of the "lazy loading" I have heard about. Is it? It SEEMS like the problem is that if I don't grab a particular "type" from the database, even if I have a model for it, it may as well not exist?
Is there a way around this, or am I doomed to have to write out a link for every single subclass I create?
Edit:
On the console, if I type
StateDescription.subclasses.count
I get 0.
If I then do StateDescription.all and THEN StateDescription.subclasses.count, i get 14.
StateDescription.descendants
, see if that makes a difference. I am not familiar with that method so can't directly answer your question of why, but your thought about lazy loading could be correct.#subclasses
actually uses the#descendants
method, so that makes sense. Ignore that. Does my answer help at all?