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We have the following code working for a complex rails form with checkboxes. I'm not really happy with the solution we have in place and I was wondering if anyone knows of a more proper way to do this in rails. All the code below is working I just want to know if there is a cleaner approach.

In my Admins controller I want to remove the need to call the following code on each update.

@user.admin.school_admin_roles.destroy_all
params[:roles].each do |school_role|
    ids = school_role.split('_')
    @user.admin.school_admin_roles.find_or_create_by_school_id_and_school_role_id(ids[0], ids[1])
end if !params[:roles].nil?

So I basically want to be able to call @user.update_attributes(params[:user]) and have rails take care of creating the needed relationships for me. I have that working with AccountRole in the form below. I want to know if there is a way to do the same thing with SchoolRole given I have an extra variable school_id in the join table.

We have the following form for editing a user and assigning roles

Screenshot of form -> https://i.stack.imgur.com/PJwbf.png

I have the following form where an admin can edit other users and assign account based roles and school based roles via checkboxes. The account based roles were easy to implement. The school based rules are a bit complicated since the join table school_admin_roles has school_id, user_id, role_id fields. We had to implement the school roles part of the form in a rather hackish way. We have the form implemented like this - notice how we hacked together school.id.to_s+'_'+role.id.to_s into the same checkbox on school roles.

In the Admins controller's update function we manually destroy all school_admin roles on each update then loop through the school roles params do a split on the ids on '-' then manually re-create each school based role. I really hate the way we've had to go about this. Could anyone shed some light on a cleaner more rails centric approach to solving this scenario?

The form -

<%= form_for @user, :url => {:controller => 'admins', :action => 'update'} do |f| %>
    <%= f.label :username %>
    <%= f.text_field :username %>

    <%= f.fields_for :admin do |uf| %>
    <div class="field">
        <%= uf.label :first_name %>
        <%= uf.text_field :first_name %>
    </div>

<label>Admin Permissions</label>  
    #account level permissions works fine
    <%= hidden_field_tag "#{uf.object_name}[account_role_ids][]"   %>
    <% AccountRole.find(:all).each do |role| %>
    <div class="account_role">
        <%= check_box_tag "#{uf.object_name}[account_role_ids][]", role.id,  @user.admin.account_roles.include?(role)%>
    <%= role.name %>
    </div>
    <% end %>

   #school level permissions a bit of a hack    
    <%= hidden_field_tag "#{uf.object_name}[school_role_ids][]"   %>
        <% SchoolRole.find(:all).each_with_index do |role, index| %>
        <div class="school_role">
        <%= check_box_tag "#{uf.object_name}[school_role_ids][]",role.id, @user.admin.school_roles.include?(role) %>
        <%= role.name %>
        <span class="advanced_box admin_permissions" <% if @user.admin.school_roles.include?(role) %>style="display:inline"<% end %>>
        <div class="content" id="perm_<%= index %>">
        <h4><%= role.name %></h4>
    <% uf.object.account.schools.each do |school|%>
    <div>
    <%= check_box_tag "roles[]", school.id.to_s+'_'+role.id.to_s, role.school_admin_roles.where(:admin_id => uf.object.id).collect(&:school_id).include?(school.id)%>
    <%= school.name %>
</div>
<% end %>
<%= link_to 'Done', '#', :class => "done" %>
</div>
<a href="#" class="open"> Advanced</a>
</span>
</div>
<% end %>
</div>
<% end %>

The controller

class AdminsController < ApplicationController
def update
    @user = User.find(params[:id])
    if  @user.update_attributes(params[:user])

      # TODO find a way to refactor this 
      @user.admin.school_admin_roles.destroy_all
      params[:roles].each do |school_role|
        ids = school_role.split('_')
        @user.admin.school_admin_roles.find_or_create_by_school_id_and_school_role_id(ids[0], ids[1])
      end if !params[:roles].nil?
      #

      flash[:notice] = "Successfully updated Admin."
      redirect_to admins_path
    else
      render "edit"
    end
  end
end

Given the following models

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :parent
  has_one :admin
  has_many :scool_admin_roles
  has_many :account_admin_roles
end

class AccountAdminRole < ActiveRecord::Base
  before_save :set_account_id

  belongs_to :admin
  belongs_to :account_role
end

class SchoolAdminRole < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :admin
  belongs_to :school_role
  belongs_to :school
end

class SchoolRole < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :school_admin_roles
end


class AccountRole < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :account_admin_role
end
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  • Can you explain why you don't like what you've got? Does it not work? Do you not like the way the form is written? Do you think it opens a security hole? I feel like the improvement you're requesting is lost in 3+ paragraphs of text. This is actually a much better question than we often see, but can you rephrase your question/goal as the first sentence of your post, and use the supporting paragraphs to elaborate? I would like to say thanks for the screenshot, and including all the relevant code - those are both very helpful.
    – jefflunt
    Mar 19, 2012 at 1:40
  • I would also recommend posting this on codereview as it is better suited to... well... review code. Mar 19, 2012 at 2:45

2 Answers 2

1

When I face code that I know smells bad, usually it leads me to the design.

In this case, the problem is the database table design.

You are hacking the value passed from a checkbox with a delimiter because the "join" table does more than just join. I believe that the relationship to school belongs_to the SchoolRole and not the SchoolAdminRole. Changing this will create a pattern much like your AccountRole.

Correcting the model design, might be a bit painful now, but it is much cleaner and will be maintainable in the future. You will thank yourself later.

2
  • I don't see a problem with this database design. Our SchoolAdminRole table is for specifying a role, the user and the school to which he has the role. Our spec requires that our role system be this granular.
    – Marcello
    Mar 21, 2012 at 18:33
  • @Marcello fair enough you certainly know better than I about your spec and the problem that you are facing. In my opinion, you are going to face a lot of work-arounds to try to accomodate this structure. It would be easier to maintain if the School has a relationship with SchoolRole directly rather than in the SchoolAdminRoles. Mar 22, 2012 at 1:02
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We refactored the code above as follows

In the model we added accepts_nested_attributes_for :school_admin_roles, :reject_if => proc { |attr| attr['school_role_id'].blank? }

and added school_admin_roles_attributes to attr_accessible

class Admin < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :account
  belongs_to :user

  has_many :school_admin_roles
  has_many :school_roles, :through => :school_admin_roles
  has_many :account_admin_roles
  has_many :account_roles, :through => :account_admin_roles

  accepts_nested_attributes_for :account

  accepts_nested_attributes_for :school_admin_roles, :reject_if => proc { |attr|  attr['school_role_id'].blank? }

  attr_accessible :account_role_ids, :email, :first_name, :last_name, :account_id, :user_id, :account_attributes, :school_admin_roles_attributes
  default_scope where(:deleted => false)
end

We then built the form as follows

<% index2 = 0 %>
<% SchoolRole.find(:all).each_with_index do |role, index| %>
<div class="school_role">
<%= check_box_tag "school_roles[]",role.id, @user.admin.school_roles.include?(role) %>
<%= role.name %>
<span class="advanced_box admin_permissions" <% if @user.admin.school_roles.include?(role) %>style="display:inline"<% end %>>
div class="content" id="perm_<%= index %>">
<h4><%= role.name %></h4>
                                <%  uf.object.account.schools.each do |school|%>
<div>
<%=    check_box_tag "#{uf.object_name}[school_admin_roles_attributes][#{index2}][school_role_id]", role.id, role.school_admin_roles.where(:admin_id => uf.object.id).collect(&:school_id).include?(school.id)%>
                                            <%= school.name %>
                                        <%= hidden_field_tag "#{uf.object_name}[school_admin_roles_attributes][#{index2}][school_id]", school.id %>
                                    </div>
                                    <% index2 += 1 %>
                            <% end %>
                            <%= link_to 'Done', '#', :class => "done" %>
                    </div>
                    <a href="#" class="open"> Advanced</a>
                </span>
            </div>
            <% end %>
        </div>
    <% end %>

Which then enabled us to refactor the controller without splitting the ids but we still have to call destroy all each time which I can live with.

def update
    @user = User.find(params[:id])
    @user.admin.school_admin_roles.destroy_all
    if  @user.update_attributes(params[:user])
      flash[:notice] = "Successfully updated Admin."
      redirect_to admins_path
    else
      render "edit"
    end
  end

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