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Rails plugin for cleanly modeling social networks using ActiveRecord
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kwahu/acts_as_network
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= acts_as_network acts_as_network is intended to simplify the definition and storage of reciprocal relationships between entities using ActiveRecord, exposing a "network" of 2-way connections between records. It does this in DRY way using only <b>a single record</b> in a <tt>has_and_belongs_to_many</tt> join table or <tt>has_many :through</tt> join model. Thus, there is no redundancy and you need only one instance of an association or join model to represent both directions of the relationship. This is especially useful for social networks where a "friend" relationship in one direction implies the reverse relationship (when Jack is a friend of Jane then Jane should also be a friend of Jack). {Zetetic LLC}[http://www.zetetic.net] extracted acts_as_network from PingMe[http://www.gopingme.com] where it drives the social networking features of the site. == INSTALLATION (git on edge rails) % cd rails_project_path % ./script/plugin install git://github.com/sjlombardo/acts_as_network.git % rake doc:plugins == INSTALLATION (subversion, rails <= 2.0.2)) % cd rails_project_path % script/plugin source http://actsasnetwork.rubyforge.org/svn/plugins % script/plugin install acts_as_network % rake doc:plugins == GitHub http://github.com/sjlombardo/acts_as_network/tree/master = INTRODUCTION The usual way of representing network relationships in a database is to use an intermediate, often self-referential, join table (HABTM). For example one might define a simple person type create_table :people, :force => true do |t| t.column :name, :string end and then a join table to store the friendship relation create_table :friends, {:id => false} do |t| t.column :person_id, :integer, :null => false t.column :person_id_friend, :integer, :null => false # target of the relationship end Unfortunately this model requires TWO rows in the intermediate table to make a relationship bi-directional jane = Person.create(:name => 'Jane') jack = Person.create(:name => 'Jack') jane.friends << jack # Jack is Janes friend jane.friends.include?(jack) => true Clearly Jack is Jane's friend, yet Jane is *not* Jack's friend jack.friends.include?(jane) => false unless you need to explicitly define the reverse relation jack.friends << jane Of course, this isn't horrible, and can in fact be implemented in a fairly DRY way using association callbacks. However, things get more complicated when you consider disassociation (what to do when Jane doesn't want to be friends with Jack any more), or the very common case where you want to express the relationship through a more complicated join model via <tt>has_many :through</tt> create_table :invites do |t| t.column :person_id, :integer, :null => false # source of the relationship t.column :person_id_friend, :integer, :null => false # target of the relationship t.column :code, :string # random invitation code t.column :message, :text # invitation message t.column :is_accepted, :boolean t.column :accepted_at, :timestamp # when did they accept? end In this case creating a reverse relationship is painful, and depending on validations might require the duplication of multiple values, making the data model decidedly un-DRY. == Using acts_as_network Acts As Network DRYs things up by representing only a single record in a <tt>has_and_belongs_to_many</tt> join table or <tt>has_many :through</tt> join model. Thus, you only need one instance of an association or join model to represent both directions of the relationship. == With HABTM For a HABTM style relationship, it's as simple as class Person < ActiveRecord::Base acts_as_network :friends, :join_table => :friends end In this case <tt>acts_as_network</tt> will expose three new properies on the Person model me.friends_out # friends where I have originated the friendship relationship # target in another entry (people I consider friends) me.friends_in # friends where a different entry has originated the freindship # with me (people who consider me a friend) me.friends # the union of the two sets, that is all people who I consider # friends and all those who consider me a friend Thus jane = Person.create(:name => 'Jane') jack = Person.create(:name => 'Jack') jane.friends_out << jack # Jane adds Jack as a friend jane.friends.include?(jack) => true # Jack is Janes friend jack.friends.include?(jane) => true # Jane is also Jack's friend! == With a join model This may seem more natural when considering a join style with a proper Invite model. In this case one person will "invite" another person to be friends. class Invite < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :person belongs_to :person_target, :class_name => 'Person', :foreign_key => 'person_id_target' # the target of the friend relationship validates_presence_of :person, :person_target end class Person < ActiveRecord::Base acts_as_network :friends, :through => :invites, :conditions => "is_accepted = 't'" end In this case <tt>acts_as_network</tt> implicitly defines five new properies on the Person model person.invites_out # has_many invites originating from me to others person.invites_in # has_many invites orginiating from others to me person.friends_out # has_many friends :through outbound accepted invites from me to others person.friends_in # has_many friends :through inbound accepted invites from others to me person.friends # the union of the two friend sets - all people who I have # invited and all the people who have invited me Thus jane = Person.create(:name => 'Jane') jack = Person.create(:name => 'Jack') # Jane invites Jack to be friends invite = Invite.create(:person => jane, :person_target => jack, :message => "let's be friends!") jane.friends.include?(jack) => false # Jack is not yet Jane's friend jack.friends.include?(jane) => false # Jane is not yet Jack's friend either invite.is_accepted = true # Now Jack accepts the invite invite.save and jane.reload and jack.reload jane.friends.include?(jack) => true # Jack is Janes friend now jack.friends.include?(jane) => true # Jane is also Jacks friend For more details and specific options see Zetetic::Acts::Network::ClassMethods The applications of this plugin to social network situations are fairly obvious, but it should also be usable in the general case to represent inherant bi-directional relationships between entities. = TESTS The plugin's unit tests are located in +test+ directory under <tt>vendor/plugins/acts_as_network</tt>. Run: [%] cd vendor/plugins/acts_as_network [%] ruby test/network_test.rb This will create a temporary sqlite3 database, a number of tables, fixture data, and run the tests. You can delete the sqlite database when you are done. [%] rm acts_as_network.test.db The test suite requires sqlite3.
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