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Have written some RoR sites in the past, but never bothered too much at DRYing up my views as it's only ever been me looking at the code.

Just starting a new site, that is likely to be a collaboration, and need help

I call this line multiple times in my views, and from multiple places.

<%= Person.find_by_id(rider.person_id).name %>

I'd like to be able to just do

<%= get_name(rider.person_id) %>

So I'd assume I'd put this code somewhere

def get_name=(id)
    Person.find_by_id(id).name
end

But where? I've tried in the model and as a helper, but always get nomethoderror.

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  • 1
    Why are you doing this? If you've got associations set up right. rider.person.name should be enough.
    – EmFi
    Nov 17, 2009 at 15:37

4 Answers 4

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You're wrong in naming this method. Why you put "=" sign in the method name?

You should call this code only in controller, and in the views, only render result. The best place for this method is a helper.

def get_person_name_by_id(id)
  Person.find_by_id(id).name || nil
end
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  • Thanks, working fine, the "=" was stopping it working when I tried this in the past
    – Nick
    Nov 17, 2009 at 13:39
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try application_controller.rb

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  • I did, but the "=" sign I had prevented it working, see below answer
    – Nick
    Nov 17, 2009 at 13:41
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How about a method on the Rider class that just returns the name?

def name
   person = Person.find_by_id( @person_id )
   if !person.nil?
      return person.name
   end
   return nil
end

used as

<%= rider.name %>

or, you could use a static/class method on the Person class.

 def Person.get_name( rider )
     if !rider.nil?
       person = find_by_id( rider.person_id )
       if !person.nil?
          return person.name
       end
     end
     return nil
 end

called as

 <%= Person.get_name( rider ) %>

Note that I dropped the reference to the id in the view code.

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Rails is all about convention over configuration. All of it's helper methods assume the most common options unless overridden. However ActiveRecord models don't have a useful default to_s.

Specifying the default action:

class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
  def to_s
    name
  end
end

Now every time you try to evaluate a person instance in string context you'll get a name.

So

<%= Person.find_by_id(rider.person_id).name %>

Can now be replaced with

<%= rider.person %>

For anything else you can specify field and methods.

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