I've been learning Rails for about two months now. I'm creating an application for teachers to track the progress of their students. I've got the "Assignments" model working for teachers to add new assignments to a classroom, and I've got the "Users" model working so that teachers and students are both Users who can log in to the app. There's also a "Classroom" model, and each classroom has_many students and has_many assignments.
One of the main views needs to feature a spreadsheet form like traditional teacher gradebook programs. The spreadsheet will use students as the rows and assignments as the columns. Each cell in the spreadsheet will represent the student's score on that assignment.
From what I've learned so far, I think that my next step should be to create a join table that links students and assignments, with a third column for "score".
The part where I'm stumped is in creating the form so that the input cells are tied to the "score" column in the join table, so that entering a new number will change the student's score for that assignment.
I'm sure that articles or tutorials must exist somewhere for this concept, but I haven't been able to find any yet. At least, none that I recognize as a solution to this goal.
Thank you in advance for any guidance.
UPDATED TO INCLUDE CODE FOR MODELS
User Model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
attr_accessor :remember_token, :activation_token, :reset_token
before_save :downcase_email
before_create :create_activation_digest
has_many :seminars, dependent: :destroy
# Neccessary for finding all classes that a student is enrolled in
has_many :aulas, dependent: :destroy,
foreign_key: :student_id
validates :first_name, length: {maximum: 25},
presence: true
validates :last_name, length: {maximum: 25},
presence: true
VALID_EMAIL_REGEX = /\A[\w+\-.]+@[a-z\d\-.]+\.[a-z]+\z/i
validates :email, presence: true, length: { maximum: 255 },
format: { with: VALID_EMAIL_REGEX },
uniqueness: { case_sensitive: false }
has_secure_password
validates :password, presence: true, length: {minimum: 6}, allow_nil: true
### Several methods that I omitted to keep the question shorter
end
Seminar Model: (A "Seminar" is a class period, but I wanted to avoid the word, "Class" because I thought that would cause errors.)
class Seminar < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :teacher, class_name: "User",
foreign_key: "user_id"
has_many :aulas, dependent: :destroy
has_many :students, through: :aulas, source: :student
has_many :assignments
validates :user_id, presence: true
validates :name, presence: true, length: { maximum: 40 }
end
Aula Model: (Aula is Spanish for class. Again, I wanted to avoid the word, "Class". This model creates a relationship between a student user and a seminar (class period)."
class Aula < ApplicationRecord
# Aula is the relationship between a student and a classperiod.
belongs_to :student, class_name: "User"
belongs_to :seminar
validates :student_id, presence: true
validates :seminar_id, presence: true
end
Assignment model:
class Assignment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :seminar
validates :name, presence: true, length: { maximum: 40 }
validates :seminar_id, presence: true
validates :possible, presence: true
end