Hi. I am making an application and its going to have dozens of model objects and maybe as many controllers. I want to organize this stuff into logical directories ... like I used to do in Java (using the package declaration). I am interesting in learning how RoR handles this seemingly common situation and also what are best practices using Ruby in general. Using ./script/generate model stuff/DebitCard creates: app/models/stuff/debit_card.rb (sweet!) However, using the generate script yields confusing results: ./script/generate scaffold stuff/Card admin/Banking debit credit creates: app/models/card.rb and app/controllers/admin/ banking_controller.rb (the controller is in a sub dir called admin, but Card is not in stuff) Further, in the case of the former example, I see that the class declaration is prefixed with Stuff:: but no module by this name is created, so on first run the application pitches a NameError. So, in general what steps should I take to create an organized model/ controller structure? Thank You
Peter, IMHO you''re going about things the right way already. The reason your models aren''t under an ''admin'' directory is because your models are tied to your database, not your controllers - you should (probably) have one model per table (excepting HABTM-joined tables), while you''ll have one controller set per e.g. user role. For the app I''m working on now, I''ve got one controller set per user role, so I''m generating e.g. - script/generate controller admin/article - script/generate controller editor/article to generate two distinct controllers for the user types ''admin'' and ''editor''. These two controllers expose different methods, so a user of type ''admin'' will see a different set of methods to a user of type ''editor. I''ve still got a single ''article'' model that gets used, because the ''article'' model is tied to the Articles database table, which isn''t dependent on the type of user. All I need to do then is to ensure that e.g. users of type ''admin'' get directed to the ''admin'' controller, and that if they try to access the ''editor'' controller they get rejected. I can do this fairly simply with a few lines of code within each controller. Make sense? Regards Dave M. On 08/02/06, Peter Brown <peter@flippyhead.com> wrote:> Hi. I am making an application and its going to have dozens of model > objects and maybe as many controllers. > > I want to organize this stuff into logical directories ... like I > used to do in Java (using the package declaration). I am interesting > in learning how RoR handles this seemingly common situation and also > what are best practices using Ruby in general. > > Using ./script/generate model stuff/DebitCard > creates: app/models/stuff/debit_card.rb (sweet!) > > However, using the generate script yields confusing results: > ./script/generate scaffold stuff/Card admin/Banking debit credit > creates: app/models/card.rb and app/controllers/admin/ > banking_controller.rb (the controller is in a sub dir called admin, > but Card is not in stuff) > > Further, in the case of the former example, I see that the class > declaration is prefixed with Stuff:: but no module by this name is > created, so on first run the application pitches a NameError. > > > So, in general what steps should I take to create an organized model/ > controller structure? > > > Thank You > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >
Yes, thanks that does make sense. I guess my problem is that if I have 30 or 40 models, I really would prefer to organize them in some fashion. Some model classes extend others in a logical heiarchy and its a hassle to have them all sitting in this one models/ directory. In order to allow your approach to work for controllers, you must manually have to create modules named ''admin'' and ''editor'', correct? Further, I cannot see how to use the ''model'' declaration in a controller to reference a model named Admin::User I''ve tried both: model Admin::User and model ''admin/user'' but neither works as expected. So what it looks like is that RoR prefers a flat organization, and in order to organize a set of models into a heiarchy I need to first create modules that match the containing directories, then instead of using model declaration use require and include in my controllers. On Feb 7, 2006, at 4:20 PM, David Mitchell wrote:> Peter, > > IMHO you''re going about things the right way already. > > The reason your models aren''t under an ''admin'' directory is because > your models are tied to your database, not your controllers - you > should (probably) have one model per table (excepting HABTM-joined > tables), while you''ll have one controller set per e.g. user role. > > For the app I''m working on now, I''ve got one controller set per user > role, so I''m generating e.g. > - script/generate controller admin/article > - script/generate controller editor/article > to generate two distinct controllers for the user types ''admin'' and > ''editor''. > > These two controllers expose different methods, so a user of type > ''admin'' will see a different set of methods to a user of type ''editor. > I''ve still got a single ''article'' model that gets used, because the > ''article'' model is tied to the Articles database table, which isn''t > dependent on the type of user. > > All I need to do then is to ensure that e.g. users of type ''admin'' get > directed to the ''admin'' controller, and that if they try to access the > ''editor'' controller they get rejected. I can do this fairly simply > with a few lines of code within each controller. > > Make sense? > > Regards > > Dave M. > > On 08/02/06, Peter Brown <peter@flippyhead.com> wrote: >> Hi. I am making an application and its going to have dozens of model >> objects and maybe as many controllers. >> >> I want to organize this stuff into logical directories ... like I >> used to do in Java (using the package declaration). I am interesting >> in learning how RoR handles this seemingly common situation and also >> what are best practices using Ruby in general. >> >> Using ./script/generate model stuff/DebitCard >> creates: app/models/stuff/debit_card.rb (sweet!) >> >> However, using the generate script yields confusing results: >> ./script/generate scaffold stuff/Card admin/Banking debit credit >> creates: app/models/card.rb and app/controllers/admin/ >> banking_controller.rb (the controller is in a sub dir called admin, >> but Card is not in stuff) >> >> Further, in the case of the former example, I see that the class >> declaration is prefixed with Stuff:: but no module by this name is >> created, so on first run the application pitches a NameError. >> >> >> So, in general what steps should I take to create an organized model/ >> controller structure? >> >> >> Thank You >> _______________________________________________ >> Rails mailing list >> Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org >> http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >> > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails
I think you''re probably right - I haven''t tried creating a hierarchy of models in the way you''re describing. As far as controllers go, I don''t have to manually create anything unusual. The top of my admin/editor controller looks like: class Admin::EditorsController < ApplicationController layout "admin" def index ... There''s no other "links" back to stuff anywhere else, and the only reason I''m using layout "admin" is to let me use a different CSS layout based on the user''s role - it''s not at all necessary except for aesthetic reasons. Regards Dave M. On 08/02/06, Peter Brown <peter@flippyhead.com> wrote:> Yes, thanks that does make sense. > > I guess my problem is that if I have 30 or 40 models, I really would > prefer to organize them in some fashion. Some model classes extend > others in a logical heiarchy and its a hassle to have them all > sitting in this one models/ directory. > > In order to allow your approach to work for controllers, you must > manually have to create modules named ''admin'' and ''editor'', correct? > > Further, I cannot see how to use the ''model'' declaration in a > controller to reference a model named Admin::User > > I''ve tried both: > > model Admin::User > and > model ''admin/user'' > > but neither works as expected. > > So what it looks like is that RoR prefers a flat organization, and in > order to organize a set of models into a heiarchy I need to first > create modules that match the containing directories, then instead of > using model declaration use require and include in my controllers. > > On Feb 7, 2006, at 4:20 PM, David Mitchell wrote: > > > Peter, > > > > IMHO you''re going about things the right way already. > > > > The reason your models aren''t under an ''admin'' directory is because > > your models are tied to your database, not your controllers - you > > should (probably) have one model per table (excepting HABTM-joined > > tables), while you''ll have one controller set per e.g. user role. > > > > For the app I''m working on now, I''ve got one controller set per user > > role, so I''m generating e.g. > > - script/generate controller admin/article > > - script/generate controller editor/article > > to generate two distinct controllers for the user types ''admin'' and > > ''editor''. > > > > These two controllers expose different methods, so a user of type > > ''admin'' will see a different set of methods to a user of type ''editor. > > I''ve still got a single ''article'' model that gets used, because the > > ''article'' model is tied to the Articles database table, which isn''t > > dependent on the type of user. > > > > All I need to do then is to ensure that e.g. users of type ''admin'' get > > directed to the ''admin'' controller, and that if they try to access the > > ''editor'' controller they get rejected. I can do this fairly simply > > with a few lines of code within each controller. > > > > Make sense? > > > > Regards > > > > Dave M. > > > > On 08/02/06, Peter Brown <peter@flippyhead.com> wrote: > >> Hi. I am making an application and its going to have dozens of model > >> objects and maybe as many controllers. > >> > >> I want to organize this stuff into logical directories ... like I > >> used to do in Java (using the package declaration). I am interesting > >> in learning how RoR handles this seemingly common situation and also > >> what are best practices using Ruby in general. > >> > >> Using ./script/generate model stuff/DebitCard > >> creates: app/models/stuff/debit_card.rb (sweet!) > >> > >> However, using the generate script yields confusing results: > >> ./script/generate scaffold stuff/Card admin/Banking debit credit > >> creates: app/models/card.rb and app/controllers/admin/ > >> banking_controller.rb (the controller is in a sub dir called admin, > >> but Card is not in stuff) > >> > >> Further, in the case of the former example, I see that the class > >> declaration is prefixed with Stuff:: but no module by this name is > >> created, so on first run the application pitches a NameError. > >> > >> > >> So, in general what steps should I take to create an organized model/ > >> controller structure? > >> > >> > >> Thank You > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Rails mailing list > >> Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > >> http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails > >> > > _______________________________________________ > > Rails mailing list > > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails > > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >