I'm following the code examples in 'The Definitive Guide to Grails' by Graeme Keith Rocher, and have come across a rather unusual stumbling block.

Essentially, 2 domain classes exist - Bookmark & Tag.

Bookmark:

class Bookmark {
static hasMany = [tags:Tag]

URL url
String title
String notes
Date dateCreated = new Date()

}

Tag:

class Tag{
static belongsTo= Bookmark

Bookmark bookmark
String name

}

I'm instructed to launch the Grails Console (is this the same as the groovy console)and create a new object as follows.

def b = new Bookmark(url: new URL('http://grails.org/'), title:'Grails', notes:'Groovy')

This results in:

Result: Bookmark : null

According to the book, GORM automatically provides an implementation of an addTag method. So I code...

b.addTag( new Tag(name: 'grails'))

Only to get whammed with the error message:

Exception thrown: No such property: b for class: ConsoleScript1

groovy.lang.MissingPropertyException: No such property: b for class: ConsoleScript1 at ConsoleScript1.run(ConsoleScript1:2)

The author hasn't accounted for this in the book. I was wondering if anyone could help me out?

Thanks.

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There is an error in the provided : you define twice the class Bookmark with the same code !! – fabien7474 Nov 27 '09 at 22:06
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2 Answers

Are you reading the 1st edition of the book? If so it's quite outdated. The add* methods have been deprecated since 0.5. It was replaced by addTo* so do this instead:

b.addToTags( new Tag(name: 'grails'))

Assuming your code example shouldn't have Bookmarks defined twice (copy and paste error?) and Tag might look like this:

class Tag {
    String name
}
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The groovy console is not the same as the grails console. To access the grails console, type grails console in your application directory - you should get a Java GUI app. It's possible that the example will work then because grails add some stuff to the standard Groovy.

Also, your problem isn't the addTag method, but the item b that you defined which cannot be found. Try entering the whole script into the console at once and executing it, instead of executing it line by line.

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Thanks for the clarification, however even when I enter in 'grails console' in CMD , the Java GUI app that launches is titled 'Groovy Console'. – Lycana Nov 27 '09 at 21:30
Ah, you're right.. still, it does behave differently than the command line console, I recommend the GUI version as it is more consistent with how the appliaction itself works. I was just thinking - I don't have the book and I don't know what version of Grails you are using - but shouldn't the syntax be b.addToTags(..)? That's what the auto method is called in Grails 1.1.1. – Gregor Petrin Nov 27 '09 at 21:47
Thanks for the recommendation. With regards to the b.addtoTags(..) that is present in Grails, but in the book, it says addTag(..) I decided to reduce everything to the bare minimum and its still failing. Bookmark Class: class Bookmark { String title String notes } ...and in GroovyConsole, I type: def b = new Bookmark(title:'Grails', notes:'Groovy') which still results in: Result: Bookmark : null Would you know why it is null? – Lycana Nov 27 '09 at 22:44
Don't know for sure, I turned off my work machine already so this is a bit of guesswork.. but maybe because the toString() method is not defined? Try defining it, e.g. something like String toString() {return 'title} – Gregor Petrin Nov 27 '09 at 23:17
..and that ' is of course too much - is there a way here to edit your own comments? – Gregor Petrin Nov 27 '09 at 23:18
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