On Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 8:51 AM, Joao Silva <[email protected]> wrote:
> I want to fake an ActiveRecord model like so... instead of having a Plan
> table in my database, I'd like to just have a variable somewhere
> (shallow example):
>
>  Plans = [{ :id => 1, :price => 9.99,
>           { :id => 2, :price => 14.99,
>           { :id => 3, :price => 19.99 }]
>
> And then I guess I'd still like to be able to associate this with my
> User model... so User.plan[:price] brings up 9.99 or whatever. User
> belongs_to :plan, so the User would have a plan_id column?
>
> Any tips? Rails 3.
>

I hate to ask the obvious question here... but why not just have a
regular model with a table behind it? What problem are you solving
here? What problems are you introducing? Just want to make sure you're
factoring the tradeoffs here...

Cheers,
Robby

-- 
Robby Russell
Chief Evangelist, Partner

PLANET ARGON, LLC
Web Design and Development with Ruby on Rails

http://planetargon.com/

+1 408 372 7466
+1 815 642 4068 [fax]

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