2

Having the following domain class:

class Word {
    Map translations
    static hasMany = [translations: String]

    String toString(){
        id
    }
}

And some instances saved in grails bootstrap:

def word1 = new Word(translations: [en:"game"]);
word1.save(failOnError: true, flush: true)

def word3 = new Word(translations: [en:"gate"]);
word3.save(failOnError: true, flush: true)

def word2 = new Word(translations: [en:"life"]);
word2.save(failOnError: true, flush: true)

It's not enabled to get translations field correctly. For example:

//input
println Word.findAll().each {
    println it.translations
}
//output
[:]
[:]
[:]
[1, 2, 3]

What's wrong?

10
  • You're defining two properties named translations with the Map and the hasMany. I'm surprised that it would work at all but I would start with only having one and it looks like you want it to be the Map. Feb 2, 2012 at 14:26
  • It doesn't matter, i think. It doesn't work even without hasMany. Check this: tinyurl.com/7ysmq2m
    – tiktak
    Feb 2, 2012 at 14:29
  • @tiktak That links seems to show it should work without the hasMany
    – tim_yates
    Feb 2, 2012 at 14:42
  • @tiktak Exactly the same output? Which version of Grails?
    – tim_yates
    Feb 2, 2012 at 14:48
  • @tim_yates, exactly the same. Grails 2.0.0.
    – tiktak
    Feb 2, 2012 at 14:51

2 Answers 2

0

The doc says:

If you want a simple map of string/value pairs GORM can map this with the following:

class Author {
    Map books // map of ISBN:book names
}
def a = new Author()
a.books = ["1590597583":"Grails Book"]
a.save()
-1

It should be

static hasMany = [translations: Map]

instead of

static hasMany = [translations: String]
0

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