3

I am working on a Rails project that has nested resources as defined below.

  resources :projects do
    resources :entries
  end

For the entries#new form, I would like to hard code the project_id from the path projects/project_id/entries/new as the project_id field of form_for in the entries' views directory. When I write:

= f.label :project_id
%br
= f.select :project_id, @project

I get the following error:

undefined method `empty?' for #<Project:0x007fa9adc06120>

Any ideas how to send the @project as that field to the form without getting f.select errors? I believe f.select takes a colleciton and so it doesn't like me just giving it a single object as its second parameter.

Thanks for your help!

2
  • 2
    If your @entry object in your form is built well (with the project_id), you can use f.hidden_field :project_id or eventually: f.hidden_field :project_id, :value => @project.id
    – MrYoshiji
    Aug 16, 2013 at 18:35
  • @MrYoshiji that worked splendidly! thank you sir.
    – Thalatta
    Aug 16, 2013 at 18:37

1 Answer 1

3

I guess you have your @entry in the new method of your controller, something like this:

def new
  @entry = Entry.new
  # etc.

You can use this instead:

def new
  @entry = @project.entries.build
  # it will set project_id to the @project.id

and in the view:

= f.hidden_field :project_id

If you don't want to initialize with the project_id directly in the view:

= f.hidden_field :project_id, value: @project.id

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