14

Let's say I have two models, Classes and People. A Class might have one or two People as instructors, and twenty people as students. So, I need to have multiple relationships between the models -- one where it's 1->M for instructors, and one where it's 1->M for students.

Edit: Instructors and Students must be the same; instructors could be students in other classes, and vice versa.

I'm sure this is quite easy, but Google isn't pulling up anything relevant and I'm just not finding it in my books.

2 Answers 2

17

There are many options here, but assuming instructors are always instructors and students are always students, you can use inheritance:

class Person < ActiveRecord::Base; end  # btw, model names are singular in rails
class Student < Person; end
class Instructor < Person; end

then

class Course < ActiveRecord::Base  # renamed here because class Class already exists in ruby
  has_many :students
  has_many :instructors
end

Just remember that for single table inheritance to work, you need a type column in the people table.

using an association model might solve your issue

class Course < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :studentships
  has_many :instructorships
  has_many :students,    :through => :studentships
  has_many :instructors, :through => :instructorships
end

class Studentship < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :course
  belongs_to :student, :class_name => "Person", :foreign_key => "student_id"
end

class Instructorship < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :course
  belongs_to :instructor, :class_name => "Person", :foreign_key => "instructor_id"
end
2
  • Hey, that's pretty clever, but unfortunately, someone could be both an instructor and a student, so I don't think this will work as-is. Sep 18, 2008 at 19:34
  • haha, this was a long time ago but shouldn't the relationships be has_many :through going both "directions"? A Person should be able to teach more than one course?
    – wuliwong
    Nov 17, 2012 at 3:36
8

in my case i have Asset and User model Asset can be create by an user and could be assigned to a user and User can create many assets and can have many Asset solution of my problem was asset.rb

class Asset < ActiveRecord::Base

belongs_to :creator ,:class_name=>'User'
belongs_to :assigned_to, :class_name=>'User' 

end

and

user.rb

class User < ActiveRecord::Base

has_many :created_assets, :foreign_key => 'creator_id', :class_name => 'Asset'
has_many :assigned_assets , :foreign_key => 'assigned_to_id', :class_name => 'Asset'

end

so your solution could be

class Course < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :students ,:foreign_key => 'student_id', :class_name => 'Person'
has_many  :teachers, :foreign_key => 'teacher_id', :class_name => 'Person'

end

and

class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to  :course_enrolled,:class_name=>'Course'
belongs_to  :course_instructor,:class_name=>'Course'

end
1
  • Doesn't this restrict the Person to having at most one course_enrolled and one course_instructor? I think to fully set it up they have to be has_many :through associations.
    – wuliwong
    Nov 17, 2012 at 3:35

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