29

I cannot seem to get a nested form to generate in a rails view for a belongs_to relationship using the new accepts_nested_attributes_for facility of Rails 2.3. I did check out many of the resources available and it looks like my code should be working, but fields_for explodes on me, and I suspect that it has something to do with how I have the nested models configured.

The error I hit is a common one that can have many causes:

'@account[owner]' is not allowed as an instance variable name

Here are the two models involved:

class Account < ActiveRecord::Base
  # Relationships
  belongs_to :owner, :class_name => 'User', :foreign_key => 'owner_id'
  accepts_nested_attributes_for :owner
  has_many :users
end

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :account
end

Perhaps this is where I am doing it 'rong', as an Account can have an 'owner', and may 'users', but a user only has one 'account', based on the user model account_id key.

This is the view code in new.html.haml that blows up on me:

- form_for :account, :url => account_path do |account|
  = account.text_field :name
  - account.fields_for :owner do |owner|
    = owner.text_field :name

And this is the controller code for the new action:

class AccountsController < ApplicationController
  # GET /account/new
  def new
    @account  = Account.new
  end
end

When I try to load /account/new I get the following exception:

NameError in Accounts#new
Showing app/views/accounts/new.html.haml where line #63 raised:
@account[owner] is not allowed as an instance variable name

If I try to use the mysterious 'build' method, it just bombs out in the controller, perhaps because build is just for multi-record relationships:

class AccountsController < ApplicationController
  # GET /account/new
  def new
    @account  = Account.new
    @account.owner.build
  end
end

You have a nil object when you didn't expect it!
The error occurred while evaluating nil.build

If I try to set this up using @account.owner_attributes = {} in the controller, or @account.owner = User.new, I'm back to the original error, "@account[owner] is not allowed as an instance variable name".

Does anybody else have the new accepts_nested_attributes_for method working with a belongs_to relationship? Is there something special or different you have to do? All the official examples and sample code (like the great stuff over at Ryans Scraps) is concerned with multi-record associations.

4 Answers 4

46

I'm a few months too late, but I was looking to solve this error and my situation was that I could not change the relationship to 'face the other way'.

The answer really is quite simple, you have to do this in your new action:

@account.build_owner

The reason why the form did not display using fields_for was because it did not have a valid object. You had the right idea up there with:

@account.owner.build

However, this is not the way belongs_to work. This method is only generated with has_many and has_and_belongs_to_many.

Reference: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/association_basics.html#belongs-to-association-reference

4
  • But the build_ method doesn't exist in polymorphic relation.
    – Donato
    Oct 2, 2014 at 22:09
  • @Jaryl, Works like a charm... :) Please comment on "what should be done when same form is rendered while editing, and has nested attributes for belongs_to association.".
    – zeal
    Nov 11, 2014 at 21:14
  • @zeal a month late again, but ideally nothing further needs to be done to handle both creating and editing. Both form_for and accepts_nested_attributes_for work hand in hand to generate form elements such that the id is present for existing records, and if it is not, it will just generate []. It event works for has_many associations in the same way, but with an additional [] to maintain some indexing. Some caveats to take note of is that with strong params, you will need to permit owner_attributes: [:account_id, :your_data], where the foreign key allows the association to be maintained.
    – Jaryl
    Dec 15, 2014 at 2:17
  • Apparently this extremely unintuitive behaviour is intended this way github.com/rails/rails/issues/2709#issuecomment-4859798
    – kluka
    Jan 15, 2020 at 15:41
8

I think your accepts_nested_attributes is on the wrong side of the relationship. Maybe something like this would work?

class Account < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :owner, :class_name => 'User', :foreign_key => 'owner_id'
  has_many :users
end

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :account
  has_one :account, :foreign_key => :owner_id
  accepts_nested_attributes_for :account
end

For building the account you want to use build_account.

You can see more examples in the docs.

2
  • D'oh! That would do it. I may actually change this so that Account has_one :owner, and User belong_to :owned_account or :team or something, and set the foreign key.
    – Billy Gray
    Aug 21, 2009 at 19:11
  • accepts_nested_attributes_for can be on either side of the relationship (at least I've confirmed for has_one, belongs_to). I assume a has_many functions the same.
    – agmin
    Jan 19, 2013 at 0:22
8

I'm using Rails 2.3.5 and I noticed the same thing. Checking out the source for active_record's nested_attributes.rb, it looks like belongs_to should work fine. So it appears it might be a "nested forms" bug.

I have a nested form exactly like yours, with User belongs_to :address, and Address is independent of the user.

Then in the form, I just do <% f.fields_for :address_attributes do |address_form| %> instead of <% f.fields_for :address do |address_form| %>. Temporary hack until there's a better way, but this works. The method accepts_nested_attributes_for is expecting the params to include something like:

{user=>{address_attributes=>{attr1=>'one',attr2=>'two'}, name=>'myname'}

...but fields_for is producing:

{user=>{address=>{attr1=>'one',attr2=>'two'}, name=>'myname'}

This way you don't have to add that has_one :account to your code, which doesn't work in my case.

Update: Found a better answer:

Here is the gist of the code I'm using to make this work right:

Rails Nested Forms with belongs_to Gist

Hope that helps.

0
-3
class Account < ActiveRecord::Base

    belongs_to :owner  :class_name => 'User', :foreign_key => 'owner_id'
end

It works for me. :foreign_key => 'owner_id' was the key problem in my case.

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