UGGHHHH! I feel so bad.

Stupid copy and paste error! Amazing I could be  staring at something
and not even see it.

I was translating something else into Person/Color/Address from what I
was working with "Product" and totally screwed up and put Product down
since it was on my mind instead of Person.

So sorry for the confusion! And thanks so much for your patience and
help. I can't believe I was mentally translating Product into Person
in my head:)

I meant to have:

class Address < ActiveRecord::Base
     belongs_to :product
 end

That makes more sense now I bet:) Apologies again.





On Fri, Jul 10, 2009 at 5:30 PM, Älphä
Blüë<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Using what I posted above you need to have the following:
>
> In your Address model you need to have a
>
> person_id
> product_id
>
> If you want these foreign keys to be different you can do the following:
>
> Class Address
>  belongs_to  :person
>  belongs_to  :product  :foreign_key => uniquesomething_id
> end
>
> Whatever foreign_key you use, needs to be setup correctly in the table
> which belongs to the other table.
>
> It really comes down to whatever you want to do and that's why
> diagraming is good because it allows you to see what you have before you
> implement things to make sure they work well.
> --
> Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
>
> >
>



-- 
Rick R

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