1

I'm trying to solve an issue in an elegant way.

I have a class:

class Pages < ActiveRecord::Base

  # Relations
  has_many :contents
  has_many :videos
  has_many :galleries
  has_many :surveys
  has_many :documents

end

I want to create a hash like this

{"videos"=>{:resource_type=>"Video", :resource_id=>2, :resource_name=>"Video di prova"}, "documents"=>{}, "contents"=>{}, "surveys"=>{}, "galleries"=>{}}

collecting the records in my associations.

I wrote a method

def get_page_resources
    result = {}
    ['videos','galleries','documents','surveys','contents'].each do |r|
      if self.try(r)
        res_collection = {}
        self.send(r).each do |resource|
          res_collection.merge!(resource_type: resource.class.name)
          res_collection.merge!(resource_id: resource.id)
          res_collection.merge!(resource_name: resource.name)
        end
        result[r] = res_collection
      end
    end
    return result
  end

It works but I think it is quite ugly. Is there a better way to write this method?

1
  • In your sample output, I believe you meant for each of the members of the outer hash to be an array. Feb 11, 2016 at 11:51

2 Answers 2

4

I would refactor your code to the following, which I think is fairly readable:

def resources
  %w(videos galleries documents surveys contents).map do |name|
    [
      name, send(name).map do |resource|
        {
          resource_type: resource.class.name,
          resource_id: resource.id,
          resource_name: resource.name
        }
      end
    ]
  end.to_h
end
  • Beginning a method with get_ is not idiomatic Ruby. Just name the method after what it returns. "page" doesn't need to be in the name, either, since this is a method on Pages. (By the way, it's more usual for an ActiveRecord model to be named in the singular rather than plural.)
  • %w() is a little nicer than a regular array of quoted words.
  • r is not a reader-friendly variable name. I used name, meaning "resource name", since it's obvious from context that it's the name of a resource.
  • The pattern of creating an enumerable, building it by iterating over another enumerable, and then returning it, can usually be made clearer and shorter with map or each_with_object.
  • When converting an array to a hash, it is often convenient to map it to an array of [key, value] pairs and then convert it to a hash with .to_h.
  • try(r) doesn't do anything, since the association methods always return a true value. I removed it.
  • self. is not necessary when calling a method other than an assignment method.
  • The merge!s can just be replaced with a hash literal.
  • return is unnecessary at the end of a method, and not idiomatic.

Refactoring is fun, so I answered your question as stated, but I agree with Nermin that it looks like you might want to look in to a serialization framework.

1
  • resource is a collection, not an object. resource.id return nil. I must also iterate inside the resource... Feb 11, 2016 at 11:39
1

You could clean it up by extracting the res_collection thing into a method like this:

def get_page_resources
  {
    videos:    res_collection(:videos),
    galleries: res_collection(:galleries),
    documents: res_collection(:documents),
    surveys:   res_collection(:surveys),
    contents:  res_collection(:contents)
  }
end

private

# this probably doesn't do what it was supposed to, but 
# just to give an impression without digging further into your
# code..
def resource_collection(resource)
  res_collection = {}
  self.send(resource).each do |resource|
    res_collection.merge!(resource_type: resource.class.name)
    res_collection.merge!(resource_id: resource.id)
    res_collection.merge!(resource_name: resource.name)
  end
  res_collection
end

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.