18

I'm currently using a standard one-to-one relationship to handle parent/child relationships:

class Category < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :category
  belongs_to :category
end

Is there a recommended way to do it or is this ok?

6 Answers 6

29

You will need to tweak the names you are using to get this working - you specify the name of the relationship, and then tell AR what the class is:

class Category < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :child, :class_name => "Category"
  belongs_to :parent, :class_name => "Category" 
end
3
  • 1
    How do we find the child categories for the specific parents.
    – demonchand
    Aug 16, 2011 at 13:08
  • You can just use parent.child?
    – Toby Hede
    Aug 16, 2011 at 23:13
  • What should be written in the routes if want something like Category/parent/3/child/1
    – vishB
    Apr 15, 2014 at 6:09
14

I found that I had to make a minor change to @equivalent8's solution to make it work for Rails 5 (5.1.4):

class Category < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :children, :class_name => "Category", foreign_key: 'parent_id'
  belongs_to :parent, :class_name => "Category", foreign_key: 'parent_id', :optional => true
end

Without the foreign_key declaration, Rails tries to find the children by organization_id instead of parent_id and chokes.

Rails also chokes without the :optional => true declaration on the belongs_to association since belongs_to requires an instance to be assigned by default in Rails 5. In this case, you would have to assign an infinite number of parents.

1
  • Very detailed! I will apply this.
    – Lane
    Aug 24, 2021 at 5:31
6

has_many version:

class Category < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :children, :class_name => "Category"
  belongs_to :parent, :class_name => "Category" 
end

#migratio
class CreateCategories < ActiveRecord::Migration 
 def change
    create_table :categories do |t|
      t.integer :parent_id
      t.string  :title

      t.timestamps null: false
    end
 end
end

# RSpec test 
require 'rails_helper'
RSpec.describe Category do
  describe '#parent & #children' do
    it 'should be able to do parent tree' do
      c1 = Category.new.save!
      c2 = Category.new(parent: c1).save!

      expect(c1.children).to include(c2)
      expect(c2.parent).to eq c1
    end
  end
end
3
  • Using Rails 5.1.4. I found that when I follow the above c2.parent gives me c1, but c1.children gives me an error: ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid (Mysql2::Error: Unknown column 'categories.category_id' in 'where clause': SELECT categories.* FROM categories WHERE categories.category_id = 5
    – guero64
    Feb 10, 2018 at 11:18
  • try has_many :children, :class_name => "Category", foreign_key: "id" Feb 12, 2018 at 4:33
  • @equivalent8 this is incorrect, only foreign_key: 'parent_id' and it should work. Jul 2, 2019 at 10:12
1

I think , should be foreign_key

class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
 has_many :children, :foreign_key => "parent_id" , :class_name => "Product"
 belongs_to :parent, :class_name => "Product" 
end

Console :

2.4.3 :004 > product  = Product.find_by_name "BOB"

 => #<Product id: 1, name: "BOB", parent_id: nil>
2.4.3 :005 > product.children
D, [2019-11-07T14:56:14.273606 #66632] DEBUG -- :   

Product Load (0.7ms) SELECT "products".* FROM "products" WHERE "products"."parent_id" = $1  [["parent_id", 1]]

 => #<ActiveRecord::Associations::CollectionProxy 
[#<Product id: 7, parent_id: 1>, 
#<Product id: 8,  parent_id: 1>, 
#<Product id: 9, parent_id: 1>]>

0

If you already have a model Category and a table categories (in schema.rb) you could do this to the model:

class Category < ApplicationRecord
    has_many :children, class_name: 'Category', foreign_key: :parent_id
    belongs_to :parent, class_name: 'Category', optional: true
end

and this as a migration:

class AddParentIdToCategories < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
  def change
    add_column :categories, :parent_id, :integer
  end
end

NOTE: In newer versions of Ruby you don't need the rocket hashes =>

-5

Since the relation is symmetric, I actually find that different than what Toby wrote, that I prefer the following:

class Category < ActiveRecord::Base 
  has_one :parent, :class_name => "Category" 
  belongs_to :children, :class_name => "Category"
end

For some reason "has one parent, many children" is the way my mind things, not "has many parents, only one child"

2
  • 4
    This doesn't make any sense to me. Why would an object belong to its children? Plus, the author stated that the relationship was one-to-one, so I don't understand why you're pluralizing it. Aug 12, 2012 at 7:38
  • this should be exactly other way around, look answer -> stackoverflow.com/a/38791328/473040 Aug 5, 2016 at 14:09

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.