17

I am getting an error while visiting /users/new in Rails 4 as Unable to autoload constant UsersController, expecting /app/controllers/users_controller.rb to define it.

Here is the controller code

    class UserController < ApplicationController
     def new
      @user = User.new
     end

     def create
      @user = User.new(params[:user]).permit(:email,  :password,:password_confirmation)

      respond_to do |format|
       if @user.save
        format.html { redirect_to new_user_path, notice: 'User was successfully created.' }
        format.json { render action: 'show', status: :created, location: @user }
       else
        format.html { render action: 'new' }
        format.json { render json: @user.errors, status: :unprocessable_entity }
       end
      end
    end 
  end

And the view for new.html.erb I have is:

  <h1>Sign up</h1>

  <%= form_for(@user)  do |f| %>

    <% if @user.errors.any? %>
      <div id="error_explanation">
        <h2><%= pluralize(@user.errors.count, "error") %> prohibited this post from being      saved:</h2>

        <ul>
          <% @user.errors.full_messages.each do |msg| %>
            <li><%= msg %></li>
          <% end %>
        </ul>
     </div>
   <% end %>
   <div class="field">
    <%= f.label :email %><br>
    <%= f.text_field :email %>
   </div>
   <div class="field">
    <%= f.label :password %><br>
    <%= f.password_field :password %>
   </div>
   <div class="field">
    <%= f.label :password_confirmation, "Confirmation" %>
    <%= f.password_field :password_confirmation %>
   </div>
   <div class="actions">
    <%= f.submit "Create my account" %>
   </div>
 <% end %>

User model:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :projects
  has_many :pledges
  has_many :posts
  has_many :comments
end
1
  • 6
    Change UserController to UsersController (by convention in rails, controller names should be the pluralized form of the resource).
    – Zach Kemp
    Sep 30, 2013 at 2:51

2 Answers 2

26

Rails expects controller names to be pluralized. The very first line of the the first file contents you posted is written as singular:

In /app/controllers/users_controller.rb you have:

class UserController < ApplicationController

Instead, it should be:

class UsersController < ApplicationController


This Rails Guide provides an example for defining a resource in your routes file. Further, there is an informational note that explains that defining a routes with the resource method will always map to the pluralized name of the controller.

This is the informational note from the guide.

Because you might want to use the same controller for a singular route (/account) and a plural route (/accounts/45), singular resources map to plural controllers. So that, for example, resource :photo and resources :photos creates both singular and plural routes that map to the same controller (PhotosController).

source: Resource Routing: The Rails Default

4
  • Can you please cite your source of "Rails expects controller names to be pluralized."
    – yekta
    Jan 8, 2016 at 15:18
  • @yekta I added some additional info with a source. This emphasizes the fact that pluralized controllers are convention. The info is buried in a side note. Pluralization is implied throughout the guides, and Rails itself. It is possible to override the default and use a singular controller.
    – sealocal
    Jan 8, 2016 at 16:41
  • Thanks for the source. Pluralizing did not resolve my issue though. In my case I was using unloadable in the ApplicationController, removing it resolved it.
    – yekta
    Jan 8, 2016 at 17:23
  • I just have to change from singular to pluralize in controller name and it works!
    – David
    Jan 2, 2019 at 6:52
0

In my case, my route had a trailing backslash, that was causing this error: get '/badges/' => 'insights#badges'

Changing this to this, works! get '/badges' => 'insights#badges'

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