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I'm trying to return an attribute of my user model in a view generated by my jobs controller

@accepteduser = User.find_by_id(@job.accepted).username || "no one...yet."

Let me simplify this so you can see the problem:

User.find_by_id(1).username

If I run that in my Rails console it returns "ASDF" if I run that on my Jobs show veiw or Jobs controller it gives me this error: undefined method `username' for nil:NilClass when I try to access the page.

Extra Info: I'm new to rails so I did some other testing. I switched it to be a different model I'm opening and it worked just fine:

Jobs.find_by_id(1).title 

That returned "Test Job" So the only difference between the User model and the Jobs model is that the User model is created by Devise gem (I think) but it still < ActiveRecord::Base So what is going on? do I need to do something special to call user because I'm using devise?

Keep in mind I can call current_user.username and it works great. but I don't want the current user in this case I want the user of a specific ID. so how do I call it?

1 Answer 1

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The find_by_id method is querying your database based on the receiver class. So, assuming standard naming, Job.find_by_id is looking in the jobs table and User.find_by_id is looking in the users table. Similarly, the former returns an instance of Job and the latter returns an instance of User.

If User.find_by_id(1) returns non-nil in the Rails console, then it should also return non-nil in a view unless the databases in question are different (e.g. development database vs. test database).

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  • I know it should, thats what has be so confused. its all development env.
    – MetaStack
    Dec 31, 2013 at 21:18
  • Have tried literally writing out User.find_by_id(1) from your view and seeing nil? Dec 31, 2013 at 21:22
  • So there is definitely a User with an id of 1 in your dev database? Dec 31, 2013 at 22:05
  • indeed, peter and alex. now, by testing I've noticed that in my console if I try User.find_by_id(2).username it gives me the NoMethod username error. there is no 2nd user. so it gives the error if it returns nil so the question is how do I get it to avoid running the .username if it returns nil?
    – MetaStack
    Dec 31, 2013 at 22:15
  • Oh! I figured something else out! The reason I was getting the error every time was because I had unfixed code in the view that was triggering the error when my jobs controller code was correct! I had User.find_by_id(@job.accepted).username when job.accepted was nil in the view at the same time my controller said User.find_by_id(1).username which was actually working correctly. Sorry about that guys!!! but I would like to insert some code so that it doesn't give that error if job.accepted is unassigned.
    – MetaStack
    Dec 31, 2013 at 22:19

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