3
def follows(follower, followed)
follow = Follows.where("follower = ? AND followed = ?", follower, followed)
if follow
    true
  else 
    false
  end
end

Here is my view code:

<% if current_user.id == @user.id%>
  <p>This is you!</p>
<% else %>
  <% if follows(current_user.id, @user.id)%>
    <p>You already follow <%= @user.username %>
  <% else %>
    <p><%= link_to "Follow!", follow_path(@user.id) %></p>
   <% end %>
<% end %>

I want to check if a user follows another, so wrote this. It takes in two user ids, and queries the Database, and should return true when a match is found and false otherwise. But it always return true. Why is this?

2
  • You would have to look in the Follows.where method surely?
    – Blundell
    Apr 19, 2011 at 22:13
  • 1
    If the function accepts ids, then the parameter names should be follower_id and followed_id. Reserve follower and followed for when you have real instances, and not just the ids.
    – kikito
    Apr 19, 2011 at 22:35

5 Answers 5

7

Let's start with some style and design issues and end with the actual answer:

  1. Models are singular by convention. Doing otherwise will only cause you more work. In this case, I would suggest Following as a suitable name, as in "a user has many followings".

  2. Foreign keys should end with _id. Doing otherwise will only cause you more work. So follower_id and followed_id.

  3. Methods that are intended to be used for their true/false nature ("query methods") should end with a ?, so follows? instead of follows,

  4. Your if statement is redundant and can be safely removed once the condition does the right thing. In ruby, in the context of conditionals, we care more about whether things evaluate to true/false than whether they are literally true or false. This means that anything other than nil or false will be "truthy".

  5. The fact that your method depends entirely on information known to User objects indicates that it would be better to hang it off of those objects, for instance current_user.follows? other_user.

  6. You are duplicating behavior that would already be provided to you by using associations.

Finally, taking all of these things into consideration, the answer:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :followings, :class_name => 'Following', :foreign_key => 'followed_id'
  has_many :followers, :through => 'followings'

  def follows?(other)
    other.followed_by? self
  end

  def followed_by?(other)
    followers.include? other
  end
end

NB: The use of the followed_by? method here is a use of double dispatch that prevents the (minor) Law of Demeter violation of one user knowing directly about the state of another user's followers. Rather, the first user object asks the second user object a direct question ("Are you followed by me?") and bases the result off of the answer. (It is also likely to be a useful method in and of itself.)

2
  • Thanks so much for showing me the proper, corrent way to do this, rather than just a quick fix! Apr 19, 2011 at 23:10
  • What a thoughtful and complete answer. Wish I had more than one upvote. Apr 19, 2011 at 23:40
3

The reason it always returns true is that, even when no records are found, where() is returning an empty array. An empty array is "true". In other news, the structure:

if (condition)
  true
else
  false
end

Can be replaced by:

condition
1

follow is actually an instance of ActiveRecord::Relation rather than the result set of your query. To work out find out if any rows would be returned by the query use follow.count. Eg.

if follow.count > 0
  true
else 
  false
end
1
  • and unless you are doing something else in the block, leave off the true else false end part
    – DGM
    Apr 19, 2011 at 23:10
1

You can use present?. Your code should be

  if follow.present?
    true
  else 
    false
  end
1
  • and unless you are doing something else in the block, leave off the true else false end part
    – DGM
    Apr 19, 2011 at 23:10
0

@rein Heinrichs answer is superb. He gives you the best Rails way to solve it. But i would like to explain why what you wrote does not work, and how you should fix that.

Follows.where(...)

returns an array, the easy way to verify this yourself is to run that line in the rails console (type rails c in the console). An array, even an empty one, is not nil and will always evaluate to true.

So to return a boolean depending on the fact whether or not any followers are found, just check for the amount of items inside the result of the where (use size > 0 or present?)

So your follows function could then have been rewritten as:

def follows(follower, followed)
  Follows.where("follower = ? AND followed = ?", follower, followed).present?
end

and this is actually quite readable as well. Hope this helps.

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