- Build an
#update
method that updates an existing record.
In this lab we will be working with a Student
class. Each student has an id
, a name
and a grade
. Students should be initialized with an id that defaults to nil
, a name and a grade.
In this lab, our connection to the database is set up for you in the config/environment.rb
file:
DB = {:conn => SQLite3::Database.new("db/students.db")}
In your Student
class, you can access the database connection via: DB[:conn]
You'll be building the following methods:
This method takes in three arguments, the id, name and grade. The id should default to nil
.
This class method creates the students table with columns that match the attributes of our individual students: an id (which is the primary key), the name and the grade.
This class method should be responsible for dropping the students table.
This instance method inserts a new row into the database using the attributes of the given object. This method also assigns the id
attribute of the object once the row has been inserted into the database.
This method creates a student with two attributes, name
and grade
.
This class method takes an argument of an array. When we call this method we will pass it the array that is the row returned from the database by the execution of a SQL query. We can anticipate that this array will contain three elements in this order: the id, name and grade of a student.
The .new_from_db
method uses these three array elements to create a new Student
object with these attributes.
This class method takes in an argument of a name. It queries the database table for a record that has a name of the name passed in as an argument. Then it uses the #new_from_db
method to instantiate a Student
object with the database row that the SQL query returns.
This method updates the database row mapped to the given Student
instance.