So my app allows users to guess the personality type of a character. The personality type with the most votes becomes the personality type of the character, and can change based on the votes indefinitely.
So there are four models. User Character Personality Declaration
(Declaration is the joining table with its model, controller, and views).
Users can cast up to vote for a personality for character, and each character can have up to one vote for a personality from each user.
The data of the personality table do not change, ever.
So you see, there are 4 models involved, where 3 are joined through 1.
This is what I have, omitting the validations.
character.rb
class Character < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :declarations
has_many :users, through: :declarations
has_one :personality, through: :declarations # This line is in question below!
end
user.rb
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :declarations
has_many :characters, through: :declarations
end
personality.rb
class Personality
has_many :declarations
end
declaration.rb
class Declaration < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :users, counter_cache: true
belongs_to :characters, counter_cache: true
belongs_to :personalities, counter_cache: true
validates :user, :character, :personality, presence: true
validates_uniqueness_of :user, :scope => [:character, :personality]
end
I am wondering which of the following two codes would be valid for properly setting up database associations, and why. I 'll go into my purpose and design right afterwards.
1) character.rb
has_many :declarations
has_many :users, through: :declarations
has_one :personality
OR
2) character.rb
has_many :declarations
has_many :users, through: :declarations
has_one :personality, through: :declarations
ALSO!, If I have a comments model, where Users has many Characters through comments, and Characters have many Users through comments, Can I just add that in?
Users and Characters already are joined through declarations. Is it valid to join them AGAIN through a second "through:" association?