sxkosone / displaying-associations-rails-lab-dc-web-060418

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Displaying Associations Rails

In the previous unit, we used validations and forms to create a management dashboard for songs and artists. Now we're ready to start connecting those models and using their relationships to display more interesting data.

  • In the controllers, this lab will require you to write show and index actions for both Song and Artist.

  • You'll need to add a foreign key by writing your own migration.

  • You'll need to set up the association in the model classes.

  • You'll need to format and link to the songs and artists according to the specs.

Additionally, you'll find that the specs require two special methods, Artist#song_count and Song#artist_name. These methods are meant to protect the views from complexity that belongs in the model.

They are also a great example of a software design principle called the Law of Demeter, which is sometimes called the "one dot" rule in object-oriented languages like Ruby. In other words,

user.best_friend

is better than

user.friends.find_by(best: true)

because all of the "friend"-related complexity is hidden away within the user model. This protects user-related code from future changes to friend functionality.

For example, if the above architecture changed such that best friendship was determined by the highest "friendship" value instead of a boolean best flag, the "two-dots" code would need to be changed everywhere, but the first snippet, which obeys the Law of Demeter, hides that complexity in the User#best_friend method, whose definition can be changed without having to track down and update every single usage.

View Displaying Associations Data Lab on Learn.co and start learning to code for free.

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