views:

167

answers:

2

The Getting Started Rails Guide kind of glosses over this part since it doesn't implement the "new" action of the Comments controller. In my application, I have a book model that has many chapters:

class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :chapters
end

class Chapter < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :book
end

In my routes file:

resources :books do
  resources :chapters
end

Now I want to implement the "new" action of the Chapters controller:

class ChaptersController < ApplicationController
  respond_to :html, :xml, :json

  # /books/1/chapters/new
  def new
    @chapter = # this is where I'm stuck
    respond_with(@chapter)
  end

What is the right way to do this? Also, What should the view script (form) look like?

+1  A: 

Try @chapter = @book.build_chapter. When you call @book.chapter, it's nil. You can't do nil.new.

EDIT: I just realized that book most likely has_many chapters... the above is for has_one. You should use @chapter = @book.chapters.build. The chapters "empty array" is actually a special object that responds to build for adding new associations.

Andrew Vit
+6  A: 

First you have to find the respective book in your chapters controller to build a chapter for him. You can do your actions like this:

class ChaptersController < ApplicationController
  respond_to :html, :xml, :json

  # /books/1/chapters/new
  def new
    @book = Book.find(params[:book_id])
    @chapter = @book.chapters.build
    respond_with(@chapter)
  end

  def create
    @book = Book.find(params[:book_id])
    @chapter = @book.chapters.build(params[:chapter])
    if @chapter.save
    ...
    end
  end
end

In your form, new.html.erb

form_for(@chapter, :url=>book_chapters_path(@book)) do
   .....rest is the same...

or you can try a shorthand

form_for([@book,@chapter]) do
    ...same...

Hope this helps.

dombesz