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Let's say there are models customer, account and address:

class Customer
  has_many :accounts
end

class Account 
  belongs_to :customer
  has_many :addresses
end

class Address
  belongs_to :account
end

Given an object address, its customer could be retrieved as:

customer = address.account.customer

Now let's store the relationship in a string variable address_relation = 'account.customer'. Given an address object, is there a way to retrieve its customer with the string variable address_relation like:

customer = address.address_relation ?

thanks for the help.

2 Answers 2

2

I'd do something like

customer = address.address_relation.split(".").inject(address) do |object, method| 
  object.send(method)
end

You could switch send by try if there's a chance there is a nil object in your relation chain

2
  • yep, this is a actually a much better example than mine. I was editing my snippet to turn it into a recursive function, but using inject/reduce is actually much more coincise. Mar 11, 2013 at 15:15
  • @user938363 inject is in the standard ruby library. Let's assume you have a collection of a1, a2, a3, ... objects. Using inject with a block named f is equivalent to calling f(f(f(base, a1), a2), a3).... For each member of the collection, the block is called and given as params 1/ the return value of the previous call 2/ the current item itered upon. base is used for the first call, when there is not yet a previous return value.
    – ksol
    Mar 12, 2013 at 7:24
1

Not sure I understand the problem correctly, but I guess you can use Ruby's send method to dynamically resolve the model relations.

object  = customer
methods = "account.customer".split(".")

methods.each do |m|
  object = object.send(m)
end

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