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I currently have two views (new.html.erb and retirement_accounts_new.html.erb) in the Accounts both using the same create and update methods.

Here's how they're defined in the controller:

  # GET /accounts/new
  def new
    @account = current_user.accounts.build
  end

  # GET /retirement/accounts/new
  def retirement_accounts_new
    @account = current_user.accounts.build
  end

And here's the same create method they share:

  def create
    @account = current_user.accounts.build(account_params)
    if @account.save
      redirect_to accounts_path, notice: 'Account was successfully created.'
    else
      render action: 'new'
    end
  end

Is there a way to make that redirect_to accounts_path conditional based on which view is rendering the form?

I would like retirement_accounts_new on save/update to redirect_to retirement_accounts

2 Answers 2

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It sounds like this might be a design issue. Are Accounts and RetirementAccounts significantly different? Will they share much of the same logic, but not all? If so, I think I would avoid using conditional logic in the controller and solve it using inheritance.

The idea here is that retirement_accounts would be considered a new resource in your routes file:

resources :retirement_accounts

Then you manually create a new controller for it (skip the rails generate... command). Save this file as app/controllers/retirement_accounts_controller.rb:

class RetirementAccountsController < AccountsController
end

Notice how it inherits from AccountsController instead of ApplicationController. Even in this empty state, RetirementAccountsController shares all of the logic of AccountsController, including the new and create methods, plus all of the view files to which they refer. To make the necessary modifications for the retirement accounts, you simply need to override the appropriate actions and views.

You can delete your retirement_accounts_new action, since it is identical to the new action. Move the view for retirement_accounts_new to app/views/retirement_accounts/new.html.erb, so that template will be rendered when new is called on the RetirementAccountsController.

As for the conditional create method, you can make a private method on both controllers that will determine where the post-create redirect should point:

class AccountsController < ApplicationController
  # ...

  def create
    @account = current_user.accounts.build(account_params)
    if @account.save
      redirect_to post_create_redirect_path, notice: 'Account was successfully created.'
    else
      render action: 'new'
    end
  end

  private

  def post_create_redirect_path
    accounts_path
  end
end

class RetirementAccountsController < AccountsController

  private

  def post_create_redirect_path
     retirement_accounts_path
  end
end
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  • This is perfect & well explained. Thank you!
    – beaconhill
    Apr 18, 2014 at 13:37
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If RetirementAccount < Account as a single table inheritance model then the thing you are asking would happen by default,

plan B would be to use explicit url_for in the redirect such as:

redirect_to url_for(controller: params[:controller], action: :show, id: @account.id), notice: 'Account was successfully created.'

Looking at the api doc this should work too:

redirect_to :action => "show", :id => @account.id,notice: 'Account was successfully created.'

Check out http://apidock.com/rails/ActionController/Base/redirect_to - there's probably an answer for you there somewhere :)


PS I have assumed that the the retirement account and account actions are in different controllers. If they're not in different controllers and not different model classes then you can put a hidden tag in the new form - but this is bad&ugly

Best solution is probably STI model and 2 separate resources for the 2 classes and everything will work out of the box. If this isn't an option, at least separate the controllers and make things clean that way, it's much better to reuse views then to reuse controllers

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