In short, your class is missing a setter (or in Ruby lingo, an attribute writer). There are two ways in which you can define a setter and handle converting the string of space-separated tag names into Tag objects and persist them in the database.
Solution 1 (Ryan's solution)
In your class, define your setter using Ruby's attr_writer method and convert the string of tag names (e.g. "tag1 tag2 tag3") to Tag objects and save them in the database in an after save callback. You will also need a getter that converts the array of Tag object for the article into a string representation in which tags are separated by spaces:
class Article << ActiveRecord::Base
# here we are delcaring the setter
attr_writer :tag_names
# here we are asking rails to run the assign_tags method after
# we save the Article
after_save :assign_tags
def tag_names
@tag_names || tags.map(&:name).join(' ')
end
private
def assign_tags
if @tag_names
self.tags = @tag_names.split(/\s+/).map do |name|
Tag.find_or_create_by_name(name)
end
end
end
end
Solution 2: Converting the string of tag names to Tag objects in the setter
class Article << ActiveRecord::Base
# notice that we are no longer using the after save callback
# instead, using :autosave => true, we are asking Rails to save
# the tags for this article when we save the article
has_many :tags, :through => :taggings, :autosave => true
# notice that we are no longer using attr_writer
# and instead we are providing our own setter
def tag_names=(names)
self.tags.clear
names.split(/\s+/).each do |name|
self.tags.build(:name => name)
end
end
def tag_names
tags.map(&:name).join(' ')
end
end