Hello,
Suppose I have 2 models Human and Person and I want to inherit one from
another so that I could use ‘human’ model/migration as a generic builder
for smiliar objects as ‘person’, for instance this with the following
table structure:
human table:
id
weight
size
person table:
id
name
surname
address
Is it possible to make such table inheritance in rails to be able to
have ‘base’ model for those that are submodels with different columns?
Thanks in advance!
On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 4:23 PM, Aljaz F. <
[email protected]> wrote:
weight
Thanks in advance!
Yes, this is possible in Rails. Thus, you can read section 19.4 of
AWDwR
3rd edition. It
provides an excellent example of what one would do to achieve table
inheritance in Rails.
Good luck,
-Conrad
Aljaz F. wrote:
Hello,
Suppose I have 2 models Human and Person and I want to inherit one from
another so that I could use ‘human’ model/migration as a generic builder
for smiliar objects as ‘person’,
Your data modeling is faulty. Human is not a sub- or superclass of
Person; rather, they’re near synonyms.
for instance this with the following
table structure:
human table:
id
weight
size
person table:
id
name
surname
address
Where’s the inheritance here? There are no fields in common except id.
What do you actually want to do?
Is it possible to make such table inheritance in rails to be able to
have ‘base’ model for those that are submodels with different columns?
Well, there’s single-table inheritance (see the Rails docs), but it’s
seldom a good idea…
Thanks in advance!
Best,
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]
Aljaz F. wrote:
It might not be the best example but I couldnt think of better one in
the moment in wrote this. I have a clear image of what I want to
implement.
Then you should be able to explain it more clearly. 
Is this single or multi-table inheritance?
They’re functionally more or less equivalent, although single-table
inheritance is rather a perversion of the relational model. The choice
between the two usually seems to be made on practical grounds.
Thanks for help
Best,
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]
Ok - I might be complicating too much.
Heres how I would do it with c++, not 100% sure what approach should I
take with rails on the database/model level.
If I want to have generic data-storage model Vehicle (which will hold
information the same information for all the vehicles - car, boat, etc.)
class vehicle holds:
color, max-speed, …
class car:
color, max-speed, number of seats, …
class boat:
color, max-speed, … with some boat-specific columns
I’d just derive car from vehicle and use car-specific data columns
because similar operations will be called on it as on boat model.
As far as I understand RoR approach: if I have a lot of duplicated code
in my application, there must be some better solution for my problem.
What do you think?
Marnen Laibow-Koser wrote:
Aljaz F. wrote:
It might not be the best example but I couldnt think of better one in
the moment in wrote this. I have a clear image of what I want to
implement.
Then you should be able to explain it more clearly. 
Is this single or multi-table inheritance?
They’re functionally more or less equivalent, although single-table
inheritance is rather a perversion of the relational model. The choice
between the two usually seems to be made on practical grounds.
Thanks for help
Best,
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]
It might not be the best example but I couldnt think of better one in
the moment in wrote this. I have a clear image of what I want to
implement.
Is this single or multi-table inheritance?
Thanks for help
Marnen Laibow-Koser wrote:
Aljaz F. wrote:
Hello,
Suppose I have 2 models Human and Person and I want to inherit one from
another so that I could use ‘human’ model/migration as a generic builder
for smiliar objects as ‘person’,
Your data modeling is faulty. Human is not a sub- or superclass of
Person; rather, they’re near synonyms.
for instance this with the following
table structure:
human table:
id
weight
size
person table:
id
name
surname
address
Where’s the inheritance here? There are no fields in common except id.
What do you actually want to do?
Is it possible to make such table inheritance in rails to be able to
have ‘base’ model for those that are submodels with different columns?
Well, there’s single-table inheritance (see the Rails docs), but it’s
seldom a good idea…
Thanks in advance!
Best,
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]
On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 5:44 PM, Aljaz F. <
[email protected]> wrote:
It might not be the best example but I couldnt think of better one in
the moment in wrote this. I have a clear image of what I want to
implement.
Is this single or multi-table inheritance?
You can implement this as single table inheritance because a RDBMS
doesn’t support multi-table inheritance (i.e.one cannot inherit the
fields
of another table). If this is what you’re looking for, then you’ll need
an
OODB which represents things as object graphs instead of table rows.
Lastly, Marnen is correct in saying that Person and Human are synonyms
of one another and I recommend reading up on object oriented design.
Good luck,
-Conrad
On Fri, Nov 06, 2009 at 01:23:25AM +0100, Aljaz F. wrote:
human table: id weight size
person table: id name surname address
If I understand your question correctly, you need to build the right
relationships. If you lived in the Star Trek universe, you might have:
class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :race
end
class Race < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :people
end
where @person.race.name should return “human” if you’ve populated the
race table and created a foreign key in person named “race_id”.
–
“Oh, look: rocks!”
– Doctor Who, “Destiny of the Daleks”