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