Routes ordering

In the “Head First Rails” book, it mentions this ordering in routes.rb:

ActionController: : Routing: : Routes. draw do | map|
map. connect ’ /ads/new’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ new’
map. connect ’ /ads/create’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’
create’
map. connect ’ /ads/’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ index’
map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

If we enter:

map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

At the top of the ordering, how will that affect our routing.

Can you just describe how to order routes in routes.rb? I mean, what is
the rule to follow when ordering routes?

Thanks.

On 20 August 2010 13:23, Abder-Rahman A. [email protected] wrote:

map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

At the top of the ordering, how will that affect our routing.

Can you just describe how to order routes in routes.rb? I mean, what is
the rule to follow when ordering routes?

The first entry in the file that matches is used, later ones are
disregarded, so if you put the /ads/:id one at the start (note there
is no space after the colon), then if a url matches that route then
later ones will not be tested. You can always try it and see for
yourself what happens. Have a look at the Rails Guide on routing for
more information.

Colin

Abder-Rahman A. wrote:

In the “Head First Rails” book, it mentions this ordering in routes.rb:

ActionController: : Routing: : Routes. draw do | map|
map. connect ’ /ads/new’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ new’
map. connect ’ /ads/create’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’
create’
map. connect ’ /ads/’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ index’
map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

If we enter:

map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

At the top of the ordering, how will that affect our routing.

Can you just describe how to order routes in routes.rb? I mean, what is
the rule to follow when ordering routes?

Thanks.

I’m not sure how old “Head First Rails” is, though I’m thinking 2008. If
you’re getting started take a look at Ruby on Rails Guides (as Colin
mentioned), which has an excellent page for this topic:

Using RESTful routes simplifies that that example is trying to achieve
by a lot, and using them I rarely run into the precedence issue:

map.resources :ads, :only => [:index, :new, :create, :show]

Thanks everyone. Yes, Parker, the “Head First Rails” is 2008.

Abder-Rahman A. wrote:

In the “Head First Rails” book, it mentions this ordering in routes.rb:

ActionController: : Routing: : Routes. draw do | map|
map. connect ’ /ads/new’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ new’
map. connect ’ /ads/create’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’
create’
map. connect ’ /ads/’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ index’
map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

If we enter:

map. connect ’ /ads/: id’ , : controller=>’ ads’ , : action=>’ show’

At the top of the ordering, how will that affect our routing.

Can you just describe how to order routes in routes.rb? I mean, what is
the rule to follow when ordering routes?

The first matched route rules. If you read any Rails routing reference,
you’ll find that is says just this.

Once again, the bigger answer: spend less time posting and more time
reading. Virtually every question you’ve asked on this list could have
been answered by 30 seconds with Google and/or 5 minutes with
documentation.

Thanks.

Best,

Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]