0

Let's take this case as an example:

class Child < ActiveRecord::Base
    belongs_to :fruitful, polymorphic: true
end

class Parent < ActiveRecord::Base
    has_many :children, as: :fruitful, dependent: :destroy
end

# Once I create the parent and children
p = Parent.create
p.children << Child.new
p.children << Child.new
p.save

# But deleting parent does not delete children:
p.destroy  # why not?

The question becomes, is "dependent: :destroy" not supported with active record's polymorphic association and do I need to implement before_destroy callback to prevent orphaned records?

3 Answers 3

2

Should that be belongs_to :parent?

You might just need to call parent.reload before calling parent.destroy so that it knows it's childrens id's. When you do << Child.new the in memory object may not accurately reflect the data.

Edit: This guy explains it better!

In practice, I expect you would not normally be destroying an object directly after manipulating it's children, so this is likely a console issue and you shouldn't need to reload in your application.

2
  • 1
    Firstly, thanks for answering. Secondly, this was a simplified example, where my real case is an actual model that has been populated with "children" using polymorphic association, and the destroy method was called within a "destroy" action of the controller. I find that all NON-POLYMORFIC relationships are deleted from the DB, while polymorphic ones are retained. I did notice that rails docs do NOT include "dependent: :destroy" option on such association...
    – Vlad
    Mar 24, 2016 at 18:13
  • Hah! Appears I forgot to actually add dependent: :destroy in my code!
    – Vlad
    Mar 24, 2016 at 18:38
0

If you need to delete the child and the parent too is to be deleted automatically

use the below

class Child < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :fruitful, polymorphic: true , dependent: :destroy
0

Use destroy instead of delete

:destroy, when the object is destroyed, destroy will be called on its associated objects. :delete, when the object is destroyed, all its associated objects will be deleted directly from the database without calling their destroy method.

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