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[Back to Guides](../README.md) | ||
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# How to add relationship links | ||
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ActiveModelSerializers offers you many ways to add links in your JSON, depending on your needs. | ||
The most common use case for links is supporting nested resources. | ||
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The following examples are without included relationship data (`include` param is empty), | ||
specifically the following Rails controller was used for these examples: | ||
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```ruby | ||
class Api::V1::UsersController < ApplicationController | ||
def show | ||
render jsonapi: User.find(params[:id]), | ||
serializer: Api::V1::UserSerializer, | ||
include: [] | ||
end | ||
``` | ||
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Bear in mind though that ActiveModelSerializers are [framework-agnostic](outside_controller_use.md), Rails is just a common example here. | ||
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### Links as an attribute of a resource | ||
**This is applicable to JSONAPI, JSON and Attributes adapters** | ||
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You can define an attribute in the resource, named `links`. | ||
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```ruby | ||
class Api::V1::UserSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer | ||
attributes :id, :name, :links | ||
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def links | ||
{ | ||
self: api_v1_user_path(object.id), | ||
microposts: api_v1_microposts_path(user_id: object.id) | ||
} | ||
end | ||
end | ||
``` | ||
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This will resilt in (example is in jsonapi adapter): | ||
```json | ||
{ | ||
"data": { | ||
"id": "1", | ||
"type": "users", | ||
"attributes": { | ||
"name": "Example User", | ||
"links": { | ||
"self": "/api/v1/users/1", | ||
"microposts": "/api/v1/microposts?user_id=1" | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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### Links as a property of the resource definiton | ||
**This is only applicable to JSONAPI adapter** | ||
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You can use the `links` class method to define the links you need in the resource's primary data. | ||
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```ruby | ||
class Api::V1::UserSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer | ||
attributes :id, :name | ||
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link(:self) { api_v1_user_path(object.id) } | ||
link(:microposts) { api_v1_microposts_path(user_id: object.id) } | ||
end | ||
``` | ||
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This will resilt in (example is in jsonapi adapter): | ||
```json | ||
{ | ||
"data": { | ||
"id": "1", | ||
"type": "users", | ||
"attributes": { | ||
"name": "Example User" | ||
}, | ||
"links": { | ||
"self": "/api/v1/users/1", | ||
"microposts": "/api/v1/microposts?user_id=1" | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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### Links that follow the JSONAPI spec | ||
**This is only applicable to JSONAPI adapter** | ||
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If you have a JSONAPI-strict client that you are working with (like `ember-data`) | ||
you need to construct the links inside the relationships. Also the link to fetch the | ||
relationship data must be under the `related` attribute, whereas to manipulate the | ||
relationship (in case of many-to-many relationship) must be under the `self` attribute. | ||
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You can find more info in the [spec](http://jsonapi.org/format/#document-resource-object-relationships). | ||
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Here is how you can do this: | ||
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```ruby | ||
class Api::V1::UserSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer | ||
attributes :id, :name | ||
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has_many :microposts, serializer: Api::V1::MicropostSerializer do | ||
link(:related) { api_v1_microposts_path(user_id: object.id) } | ||
end | ||
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#this is needed to avoid n+1, gem core devs are working to remove this necessity | ||
#more on: https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/issues/1325 | ||
def microposts | ||
object.microposts.loaded ? object.microposts : object.microposts.none | ||
end | ||
end | ||
``` | ||
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This will result in: | ||
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```json | ||
{ | ||
"data": { | ||
"id": "1", | ||
"type": "users", | ||
"attributes": { | ||
"name": "Example User" | ||
}, | ||
"relationships": { | ||
"microposts": { | ||
"data": [], | ||
"links": { | ||
"related": "/api/v1/microposts?user_id=1" | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
``` |