306

I have a functioning Rails 3 app that uses has_many :through associations which is not, as I remake it as a Rails 4 app, letting me save ids from the associated model in the Rails 4 version.

These are the three relevant models are the same for the two versions.

Categorization.rb

class Categorization < ActiveRecord::Base

  belongs_to :question
  belongs_to :category
end

Question.rb

has_many :categorizations
has_many :categories, through: :categorizations

Category.rb

has_many :categorizations
has_many :questions, through: :categorizations

In both apps, the category ids are getting passed into the create action like this

  "question"=>{"question_content"=>"How do you spell car?", "question_details"=>"blah ", "category_ids"=>["", "2"],

In the Rails 3 app, when I create a new question, it inserts into questions table and then into the categorizations table

 SQL (82.1ms)  INSERT INTO "questions" ("accepted_answer_id", "city", "created_at", "details", "province", "province_id", "question", "updated_at", "user_id") VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?)  [["accepted_answer_id", nil], ["city", "dd"], ["created_at", Tue, 14 May 2013 17:10:25 UTC +00:00], ["details", "greyound?"], ["province", nil], ["province_id", 2], ["question", "Whos' the biggest dog in the world"], ["updated_at", Tue, 14 May 2013 17:10:25 UTC +00:00], ["user_id", 53]]
  SQL (0.4ms)  INSERT INTO "categorizations" ("category_id", "created_at", "question_id", "updated_at") VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)  [["category_id", 2], ["created_at", Tue, 14 May 2013 17:10:25 UTC +00:00], ["question_id", 66], ["updated_at", Tue, 14 May 2013 17:10:25 UTC +00:00]]

In the rails 4 app, after it processes the parameters in QuestionController#create, I'm getting this error in the server logs

Unpermitted parameters: category_ids

and the question is only getting inserted into the questions table

 (0.2ms)  BEGIN
  SQL (67.6ms)  INSERT INTO "questions" ("city", "created_at", "province_id", "question_content", "question_details", "updated_at", "user_id") VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7) RETURNING "id"  [["city", "dd"], ["created_at", Tue, 14 May 2013 17:17:53 UTC +00:00], ["province_id", 3], ["question_content", "How's your car?"], ["question_details", "is it runnign"], ["updated_at", Tue, 14 May 2013 17:17:53 UTC +00:00], ["user_id", 12]]
   (31.9ms)  COMMIT

Although I am not storing the category_ids on the Questions model, I set category_ids as a permitted parameter in the questions_controller

   def question_params

      params.require(:question).permit(:question_details, :question_content, :user_id, :accepted_answer_id, :province_id, :city, :category_ids)
    end

Can anyone explain how I'm supposed to save the category_ids? Note, there is no create action in the categories_controller.rb of either app.

These are the three tables that are the same in both apps

 create_table "questions", force: true do |t|
    t.text     "question_details"
    t.string   "question_content"
    t.integer  "user_id"
    t.integer  "accepted_answer_id"
    t.datetime "created_at"
    t.datetime "updated_at"
    t.integer  "province_id"
    t.string   "city"
  end

 create_table "categories", force: true do |t|
    t.string   "name"
    t.datetime "created_at"
    t.datetime "updated_at"
  end

  create_table "categorizations", force: true do |t|
    t.integer  "category_id"
    t.integer  "question_id"
    t.datetime "created_at"
    t.datetime "updated_at"
  end

Update

This is the create action from the Rails 3 app

  def create
      @question = Question.new(params[:question])
      respond_to do |format|
      if @question.save
        format.html { redirect_to @question, notice: 'Question was successfully created.' }
        format.json { render json: @question, status: :created, location: @question }
      else
        format.html { render action: "new" }
        format.json { render json: @question.errors, status: :unprocessable_entity }
      end
    end
end

This is the create action from the Rails 4 app

   def create
      @question = Question.new(question_params)

       respond_to do |format|
      if @question.save
        format.html { redirect_to @question, notice: 'Question was successfully created.' }
        format.json { render json: @question, status: :created, location: @question }
      else
        format.html { render action: "new" }
        format.json { render json: @question.errors, status: :unprocessable_entity }
      end
    end
    end

This is the question_params method

 private
    def question_params 
      params.require(:question).permit(:question_details, :question_content, :user_id, :accepted_answer_id, :province_id, :city, :category_ids)
    end
2
  • What does the create action look like in both apps?
    – bennick
    May 14, 2013 at 19:00
  • @bennick I added the two create actions. Thanks
    – Leahcim
    May 14, 2013 at 20:27

6 Answers 6

607

This https://github.com/rails/strong_parameters seems like the relevant section of the docs:

The permitted scalar types are String, Symbol, NilClass, Numeric, TrueClass, FalseClass, Date, Time, DateTime, StringIO, IO, ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile and Rack::Test::UploadedFile.

To declare that the value in params must be an array of permitted scalar values map the key to an empty array:

params.permit(:id => [])

In my app, the category_ids are passed to the create action in an array

"category_ids"=>["", "2"],

Therefore, when declaring strong parameters, I explicitly set category_ids to be an array

params.require(:question).permit(:question_details, :question_content, :user_id, :accepted_answer_id, :province_id, :city, :category_ids => [])

Works perfectly now!

(IMPORTANT: As @Lenart notes in the comments, the array declarations must be at the end of the attributes list, otherwise you'll get a syntax error.)

11
  • 114
    I've also noticed that declarations for arrays should be at the end of the attributes list. Otherwise I get a syntax error syntax error, unexpected ')', expecting =>
    – Lenart
    Oct 13, 2013 at 8:35
  • 52
    The reason array declarations (nested params) are at the end is that ActionController::Parameters.permit expects each argument to be a Hash or a Symbol. Ruby magic will turn all key value pairs s at the end of a method call into one hash, but Ruby won't know what to do if you mix symbols with key/value pairs in your method call.
    – sameers
    Nov 20, 2013 at 0:05
  • 7
    if category_ids is not an array (e.g. a string was sent) then rails totally goes nuts and raises a ERROR TypeError: expected Array (got String) for param `category_ids' Is that a bug in rails? Edit: yes it is: github.com/rails/rails/issues/11502 Apr 15, 2014 at 14:15
  • 4
    @Lenart Thanks, I thought I was going crazy. This should at least appear in the strong_params README Feb 20, 2015 at 22:20
  • 5
    @Lenart you can add it as hash if you want to avoid syntax error. params.permit(:foo, { bar: [] }, :zoo). Mar 13, 2018 at 20:28
118

If you want to permit an array of hashes(or an array of objects from the perspective of JSON)

params.permit(:foo, array: [:key1, :key2])

2 points to notice here:

  1. array should be the last argument of the permit method.
  2. you should specify keys of the hash in the array, otherwise you will get an error Unpermitted parameter: array, which is very difficult to debug in this case.
4
  • and arrays of arrays are not supported (yet): github.com/rails/rails/issues/23640 Apr 7, 2017 at 16:10
  • 17
    array does not need to be at the end, but you need to make sure you have valid Ruby. params.permit(:foo, array: [:key1, :key2], :bar) would not be valid ruby as the interpreter expects hash key:value pairs after the first set. To have valid Ruby you need params.permit(:foo, {array: [:key1, :key2]}, :bar) Sep 25, 2017 at 21:29
  • You are a Champ!
    – Lollypop
    Oct 24, 2017 at 18:49
  • This answer should be edited with mastBlasta's comment (I tried but the suggested edit queue is full)
    – Matthew
    Mar 8, 2021 at 8:37
30

The array should be the last argument of the permit method.

params.permit(:id => [])

Also since Ruby 1.9 or newer, you can use:

params.permit(id: [])
4
  • 16
    please not that the array should be the last argument of the permit method Feb 7, 2018 at 16:59
  • 4
    That hash syntax that you said apply for Rails v4+ is actually a syntax available in Ruby 1.9 & newer, not the Rails framework (although Rails 4 requires Ruby 1.9.3 or newer)
    – MegaTux
    May 28, 2019 at 17:39
  • That's not correct @MatiasElorriaga... see mastaBlasta's comment on Brian's answer, or github.com/rails/strong_parameters#nested-parameters
    – Matthew
    Mar 8, 2021 at 8:38
  • this saved me in a situation like this , thanks a lot. game_results: [:score, :date ,fouls: [],players: [],subs: []]
    – timjini
    Aug 3, 2023 at 20:10
23

If you have a hash structure like this:

Parameters: {"link"=>{"title"=>"Something", "time_span"=>[{"start"=>"2017-05-06T16:00:00.000Z", "end"=>"2017-05-06T17:00:00.000Z"}]}}

Then this is how I got it to work:

params.require(:link).permit(:title, time_span: [[:start, :end]])
1
  • 3
    took me way to long to find this
    – coorasse
    Jun 18, 2021 at 14:21
11

when you want to permit multiple array fields you will have to list array fields at last while permitting ,as given -

params.require(:questions).permit(:question, :user_id, answers: [], selected_answer: [] )

(this works)

9

I can't comment yet but following on Fellow Stranger solution you can also keep nesting in case you have keys which values are an array. Like this:

filters: [{ name: 'test name', values: ['test value 1', 'test value 2'] }]

This works:

params.require(:model).permit(filters: [[:name, values: []]])

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.