9

Basically, I have an object that belongs_to :companies, and has the :company_id attribute. When I render json: @coupons, is it possible for the JSON to contain an attribute of its owner rather than the company_id?

3 Answers 3

13

You might be able to do something like render :json => @coupons.to_json(:include => :company), at least it seems to have worked with my initial testing in rails 2.3.8.

Answer edited to use :include => :company rather than :include => :companies

1
  • 1
    Does a coupon really belong to :companies (plural) ? if not, try the above but :include => :company Sep 21, 2011 at 20:59
3

If you need to keep your json as compact as possible, it's best to use custom model methods to return only the data you need. I ended up adding a custom as_json method to the parent model and using the methods option to return subsets of the related object's data. Using include will include a full json serialization of the related model.

def as_json(options={})
  super(
    :only => [:id, :name],
    :methods => [
      :organization_type_name,
    ]
  )
end

def organization_type_name
  self.organization_type.name
end
0

First of all your conventions are wrong.

Its should be

// In coupon.rb

belongs_to :company

And while rendering the object do this

render json: @coupon.as_json(include: :company)

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