- Understand the common methods we have access to from our ActiveRecord associations
- Use the methods that ActiveRecord gives you based on your associations
Previously, we learned what Active Record associations are and how to use them. In this lab, we are going to start with the association relationships already coded for Songs
, Genres
, and Artists
. These associations look like this:
- Artists have many songs and a song belongs to an artist.
- Artists have many genres through songs.
- Songs belong to a genre.
- A genre has many songs.
- A genre has many artists through songs.
You may recall that by writing a few migrations and making use of the appropriate ActiveRecord macros, we will be able to:
- ask an Artist about its songs and genres
- ask a Song about its genre and its artist
- ask a Genre about its songs and artists.
We will build these associations through the use of Active Record migrations and macros.
You can take a look at the migration, if you need a reminder of the tables' structures. Run rake db:migrate
in your terminal to execute our table creations.
We used the following AR macros (or methods): has_many
, has_many through
, belongs_to
. They helped us associate songs
, genres
, and artists
.
class Song < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :artist
belongs_to :genre
end
class Artist < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :songs
has_many :genres, through: :songs
end
class Genre < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :songs
has_many :artists, through: :songs
end
And that's it! With this relatively small amount of code, we now have access to a whole host of methods provided by Active Record.
Go ahead and run the test suite and you'll see that we are passing the first 14 tests. Our associations are all working, just because of our migrations and use of macros.
We can now call methods on the objects we associated with one another. Let's play around with our code.
hello = Song.create(name: "Hello")
=> #<Song:0x007fc75a8de3d8 id: nil, name: "Hello", artist_id: nil, genre_id: nil>
adele = Artist.create(name: "Adele")
=> #<Artist:0x007fc75b8d9490 id: nil, name: "Adele">
So, we know that an individual song has an artist_id
attribute. We could associate hello
to adele
by setting hello.artist_id=
equal to the id
of the adele
object. BUT! Active Record makes it so easy for us. The macros we implemented in our classes allow us to associate a song object directly to an artist object:
hello.artist = adele
=> #<Artist:0x007fc75b8d9490 id: nil, name: "Adele">
Now, we can ask hello
who its artist is:
hello.artist
=> #<Artist:0x007fc75b8d9490 id: nil, name: "Adele">
We can even chain methods to ask hello
for the name of its artist:
hello.artist.name
=> "Adele"
We can tell the artist about their song:
rolling_in_the_deep = Song.create(name: "Rolling in the Deep")
=> #<Song:0x007fc75bb4d1e0 id: nil, name: "Rolling in the Deep", artist_id: nil, genre_id: nil>
adele.songs << rolling_in_the_deep
=> [ #<Song:0x007fc75bb4d1e0 id: nil, name: "Rolling in the Deep", artist_id: nil, genre_id: nil>]
rolling_in_the_deep.artist
=> #<Artist:0x007fc75b8d9490 id: nil, name: "Adele">
Be sure to run rake db:migrate
We are going to write some methods of our own. We want to take advantage of our new methods, thanks to the ActiveRecord macros. Therefore, every method we write will use some code that was generated by a macro. For example:
class Artist
def get_first_song
end
end
How would you write the #get_first_song
method so that it returns the first song
object saved to the artist it's called on? By using the macros! Just like above when we called adele.songs
, we now want to call songs
on the instance that the method will be called on in the future. How do we do that? Yes, self
!
class Artist
def get_first_song
self.songs
end
end
This will return an array of the artist's songs. Since our method is specifically looking for the first song, we just have to chain on a first
.
class Artist
def get_first_song
self.songs.first
end
end
We'll do a handful of methods like this one for the Song
, Artist
, and Genre
classes. This lab is test driven, so you can follow the specs.