25

I have a model with:

has_and_belongs_to_many :users

How do I validate that the model has at least one user in the model? I tried:

validates_presence_of :users

But that doesn't seem to give me what I want...

5 Answers 5

36

I would write custom validation:

validate :has_users?

def has_users?
  # rails 2:
  errors.add_to_base "Model must have some users." if self.users.blank?
end

That would do exactly that.

Note in rails 3+ you have to use:

  # rails 3+
  errors.add :base, "Model must have some users." if self.users.blank?

In rails 4+ there's a built-in shortcut, so you can simply do:

validates :users, presence: true
2
  • 9
    I needed to use self.errors.add :base, "Model must have some users." Nov 4, 2011 at 11:12
  • This will brake the has_and_belongs_to_many relation if you do: your_related_model.users.build(name: "Test") your_related_model.save you will get the error "Model must have some users." This is not correct Jun 21, 2022 at 6:17
33

In rails 4 you can just do

validates :users, presence: true
3

In Rails 3.2.x:

validate :has_users?

def has_users?
  errors.add(:base, 'Error message') if self.users.blank?
end
1

Josh Susser wrote a plugin that adds a validates_existence_of method that does what you want. It ensures that a foreign key references a record that exists.

1
  • That looked promising, but it didn't work: "Cannot validate existence of :users because it is not a belongs_to association." Looks like it's only for belongs_to...
    – cmaughan
    Jun 4, 2009 at 12:44
1

Try:

validates :users, :length => { :minimum => 1 }

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