I'm creating a Rails app for managing individual items. Each item has an item number (zero padded, 4 digit number, e.g. 0002
or 0212
or 1002
), which I would like to use in the urls for the application. If I currently navigate to /items/2
I get the item with id = 2
and not the item with item_number = 2
. My routes.rb file contains only resources :items
; how would I go about allowing for this to pull out the items by item number?
2 Answers
Override the to_param
method in your Item model:
def to_param
item_number.to_s
end
You don't have to change anything in your routes.
You'll just have to find the items using find_by_item_number(params[:id])
Just so you know: if you wanted to display the name of the item in the url, you could do the following:
def to_param
"#{id}-#{name}".parameterize
end
What's great about that, is that "1-item-name".to_i is 1
! So you would not have to change your find methods everywhere.
-
-
i would also recommend to create a class-method called
find_by_param
as a companion– phoetDec 2, 2011 at 21:22 -
Thanks Robin, I've just added the to_param to return number, and updated my item controller @item = Item.find_by_number(params[:id]), but am getting a NoMethodError of private method `split' called for 1023:Fixnum when I navigate to /items/1023– JackDec 2, 2011 at 21:22
-
1
Normally, the item_path
helper (that you get for free by defining resources :items
) uses the item's id to construct the url:
item = Item.find(1)
item_path(item) # => "/items/1", i.e. the same result as calling item_path(item.id)
It does this "magic" by calling the to_param instance method on the Item class, which by default returns the item's id.
So if you want something else, you have to override the to_param method. In your case, you could do something like this:
class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
def to_param
item_number
end
end
And then:
item = Item.find_by_item_id('0001')
item_path(item) # => "/users/0001"