1

I'm building a sample app for practice and am having trouble determining the best way to organize my models and associations. So let's just say I have 3 models:

  1. Schools
  2. Classes
  3. Students

I want:

  • schools to have many classes
  • classes to have many students
  • classes to belong to a school
  • students to be enrolled in many classes in many different schools

The associations are making me dizzy, I'm not sure which ones to use. Help would be greatly appreciated.

3 Answers 3

2

Renamed class to course, as the class name Class is already taken. A join class such as enrollments would handle your many to many course <=> student relationship.

class School
  has_many :courses
end

class Course
  belongs_to :school
  has_many :enrollments
  has_many :students, :through => :enrollments
end

class Student
  has_many :enrollments
  has_many :courses, :through => :enrollments
end

class Enrollment
  belongs_to :course
  belongs_to :student
end    
2

Your models should looks like this:

class School < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :classes
  has_many :students, :through => :classes
end

class Class < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :school
  has_and_belongs_to_many :students
end

class Student < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_and_belongs_to_many :classes
end

Make sure your Student and Class tables have class_id and school_id columns respectively.

Also, Class is a reserved word in Rails, so it might cause problems (you might have to use a different name)

5
  • If I wanted to list on the student profile what schools they are a part of, should I call student.class.school? Or should I add to the student model has_many :schools, :through => :classes ?
    – Zach
    Nov 21, 2011 at 2:58
  • Also I want students to belong to many classes so would your solution not work?
    – Zach
    Nov 21, 2011 at 3:00
  • Apologies should have been has_and_belongs_to_many. Answer updated. With :through you can just call @school.students Nov 21, 2011 at 3:04
  • Don't think this works guys unless I'm just dead wrong. I said that I wanted students to be a part of multiple schools as well. How would that be added? But remember they belong to these school via the classes, would it be a has_many :through?
    – Zach
    Nov 21, 2011 at 3:27
  • Ok so now I have three different answers that all seem to make sense. Which one is the most efficient?
    – Zach
    Nov 21, 2011 at 3:41
1

Though on first blush it would seem students should belong directly to class, class isn't really a true "has_and_belongs_to_many" replacement. For that I would use "enrollment". (Note with rails 3.1 you can now do nested :through calls.)

Here's a slightly more advanced implementation than the previous commenter's:

class School << ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :academic_classes
  has_many :enrollments, :through => :academic_classes
  has_many :students, :through => :enrollments, :uniq => true
end

class AcademicClass << ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :school
  has_many :enrollments
end

class Enrollment << ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :academic_class
  belongs_to :student
end

class Student << ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :enrollments
  has_many :academic_classes, :through => :enrollments
  has_many :schools, :through => :academic_classes, :uniq => true
end
2
  • Thanks! That makes a lot of sense. If I wanted to list the schools that each student is in how would I call it using this solution?
    – Zach
    Nov 21, 2011 at 3:05
  • I updated the example to show you how you could do something like: @student.schools
    – twmills
    Nov 21, 2011 at 23:25

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