You're misreading the docs slightly. some_firm.client.new
is creating a new Client
object from the clients collection, and so it can automatically set the firm_id
to some_firm.id
, whereas the docs are calling Client.new
which has no knowledge of any Firm's id at all, so it needs the firm_id
passed to it.
The only difference between some_firm.clients.new
and some_firm.clients.build
seems to be that build
also adds the newly-created client to the clients
collection:
(some_firm = Firm.new).save # Create and save a new Firm
#=> true
some_firm.clients # No clients yet
#=> []
some_firm.clients.new # Create a new client
#=> #<Client id: nil, firm_id: 1, created_at: nil, updated_at: nil>
some_firm.clients # Still no clients
#=> []
some_firm.clients.build # Create a new client with build
#=> #<Client id: nil, firm_id: 1, created_at: nil, updated_at: nil>
some_firm.clients # New client is added to clients
#=> [#<Client id: nil, firm_id: 1, created_at: nil, updated_at: nil>]
some_firm.save
#=> true
some_firm.clients # Saving firm also saves the attached client
#=> [#<Client id: 1, firm_id: 1, created_at: "2011-02-11 00:18:47", updated_at: "2011-02-11 00:18:47">]
If you're creating an object through an association, build
should be preferred over new
as build keeps your in-memory object, some_firm
(in this case) in a consistent state even before any objects have been saved to the database.