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Use n-dashes for ranges/relations.

This commit is contained in:
Andreas Scherer 2009-02-12 09:04:07 +01:00
parent 1ce05c5a36
commit 115f352deb
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ To learn more about the different types of associations, read the next section o
h3. The Types of Associations
In Rails, an _association_ is a connection between two Active Record models. Associations are implemented using macro-style calls, so that you can declaratively add features to your models. For example, by declaring that one model +belongs_to+ another, you instruct Rails to maintain Primary Key-Foreign Key information between instances of the two models, and you also get a number of utility methods added to your model. Rails supports six types of association:
In Rails, an _association_ is a connection between two Active Record models. Associations are implemented using macro-style calls, so that you can declaratively add features to your models. For example, by declaring that one model +belongs_to+ another, you instruct Rails to maintain Primary KeyForeign Key information between instances of the two models, and you also get a number of utility methods added to your model. Rails supports six types of association:
* +belongs_to+
* +has_one+

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@ -627,7 +627,7 @@ h3. Understanding Parameter Naming Conventions
As you've seen in the previous sections, values from forms can be at the top level of the +params+ hash or nested in another hash. For example in a standard +create+
action for a Person model, +params[:model]+ would usually be a hash of all the attributes for the person to create. The +params+ hash can also contain arrays, arrays of hashes and so on.
Fundamentally HTML forms don't know about any sort of structured data, all they generate is name-value pairs, where pairs are just plain strings. The arrays and hashes you see in your application are the result of some parameter naming conventions that Rails uses.
Fundamentally HTML forms don't know about any sort of structured data, all they generate is namevalue pairs, where pairs are just plain strings. The arrays and hashes you see in your application are the result of some parameter naming conventions that Rails uses.
TIP: You may find you can try out examples in this section faster by using the console to directly invoke Rails' parameter parser. For example <pre> ActionController::UrlEncodedPairParser.parse_query_parameters "name=fred&phone=0123456789" # => {"name"=>"fred", "phone"=>"0123456789"} </pre>