h2. Rails nested model forms Creating a form for a model _and_ its associations can become quite tedious. Therefor Rails provides helpers to assist in dealing with the complexities of generating these forms _and_ the required CRUD operations to create, update, and destroy associations. In this guide you will: * do stuff endprologue. NOTE: This guide assumes the user knows how to use the "Rails form helpers":form_helpers.html in general. Also, it’s *not* an API reference. For a complete reference please visit "the Rails API documentation":http://api.rubyonrails.org/. h3. Model setup To be able to use the nested model functionality in your forms, the model will need to support some basic operations. First of all, it needs to define a writer method for the attribute that corresponds to the association you are building a nested model form for. The +fields_for+ form helper will look for this method to decide whether or not a nested model form should be build. If the associated object is an array a form builder will be yielded for each object, else only a single form builder will be yielded. Consider a Person model with an associated Address. When asked to yield a nested FormBuilder for the +:address+ attribute, the +fields_for+ form helper will look for a method on the Person instance named +address_attributes=+. h4. ActiveRecord::Base model For an ActiveRecord::Base model and association this writer method is commonly defined with the +accepts_nested_attributes_for+ class method: h5. has_one class Person < ActiveRecord::Base has_one :address accepts_nested_attributes_for :address end h5. belongs_to class Person < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :firm accepts_nested_attributes_for :firm end h5. has_many / has_and_belongs_to_many class Person < ActiveRecord::Base has_many :projects accepts_nested_attributes_for :projects end h4. Custom model As you might have inflected from this explanation, you _don’t_ necessarily need an ActiveRecord::Base model to use this functionality. The following examples are sufficient to enable the nested model form behaviour: h5. Single associated object class Person def address Address.new end def address_attributes=(attributes) # ... end end h5. Association collection class Person def projects [Project.new, Project.new] end def projects_attributes=(attributes) # ... end end NOTE: See (TODO) in the advanced section for more information on how to deal with the CRUD operations in your custom model. h3. Views h4. Controller code A nested model form will _only_ be build if the associated object(s) exist. This means that for a new model instance you would probably want to build the associated object(s) first. Consider the following typical RESTful controller which will prepare a new Person instance and its +address+ and +projects+ associations before rendering the +new+ template: class PeopleController < ActionController:Base def new @person = Person.new @person.built_address 2.times { @person.projects.build } end def create @person = Person.new(params[:person]) if @person.save # ... end end end NOTE: Obviously the instantiation of the associated object(s) can become tedious and not DRY, so you might want to move that into the model itself. ActiveRecord::Base provides an +after_initialize+ callback which is a good way to refactor this. h4. Form code Now that you have a model instance, with the appropriate methods and associated object(s), you can start building the nested model form. h5. Standard form Start out with a regular RESTful form: <% form_for @person do |f| %> <%= f.text_field :name %> <% end %> This will generate the following html:
h5. Nested form for a single associated object Now add a nested form for the +address+ association: <% form_for @person do |f| %> <%= f.text_field :name %> <% f.fields_for :address do |af| %> <%= f.text_field :street %> <% end %> <% end %> This generates:
Notice that +fields_for+ recognized the +address+ as an association for which a nested model form should be build by the way it has namespaced the +name+ attribute. When this form is posted the Rails parameter parser will construct a hash like the following: { "person" => { "name" => "Eloy Duran", "address_attributes" => { "street" => "Nieuwe Prinsengracht" } } } That’s it. The controller will simply pass this hash on to the model from the +create+ action. The model will then handle building the +address+ association for you and automatically save it when the parent (+person+) is saved. h5. Nested form for a collection of associated objects The form code for an association collection is pretty similar to that of a single associated object: <% form_for @person do |f| %> <%= f.text_field :name %> <% f.fields_for :projects do |pf| %> <%= f.text_field :name %> <% end %> <% end %> Which generates:
As you can see it has generated 2 +project name+ inputs, one for each new +project+ that’s build in the controllers +new+ action. Only this time the +name+ attribute of the input contains a digit as an extra namespace. This will be parsed by the Rails parameter parser as: { "person" => { "name" => "Eloy Duran", "projects_attributes" => { "0" => { "name" => "Project 1" }, "1" => { "name" => "Project 2" } } } } You can basically see the +projects_attributes+ hash as an array of attribute hashes. One for each model instance. NOTE: The reason that +fields_for+ constructed a form which would result in a hash instead of an array is that it won't work for any forms nested deeper than one level deep. TIP: You _can_ however pass an array to the writer method generated by +accepts_nested_attributes_for+ if you're using plain Ruby or some other API access. See (TODO) for more info and example.