Specs:
- Using Ruby on Rails for the project
- Include at least one has_many relationship (x has_many y; e.g. User has_many Recipes)
- Include at least one belongs_to relationship (x belongs_to y; e.g. Post belongs_to User)
- Include at least two has_many through relationships (x has_many y through z; e.g. Recipe has_many Items through Ingredients)
- Include at least one many-to-many relationship (x has_many y through z, y has_many x through z; e.g. Recipe has_many Items through Ingredients, Item has_many Recipes through Ingredients)
- The "through" part of the has_many through includes at least one user submittable attribute, that is to say, some attribute other than its foreign keys that can be submitted by the app's user (attribute_name e.g. ingredients.quantity)
- Include reasonable validations for simple model objects (list of model objects with validations e.g. User, Recipe, Ingredient, Item)
- Include a class level ActiveRecord scope method (model object & class method name and URL to see the working feature e.g. User.most_recipes URL: /users/most_recipes)
- Include signup
- Include login
- Include logout
- Include third party signup/login (how e.g. Devise/OmniAuth)
- Include nested resource show or index (URL e.g. users/2/recipes)
- Include nested resource "new" form (URL e.g. recipes/1/ingredients/new)
- Include form display of validation errors (form URL e.g. /recipes/new)
Confirm:
- The application is pretty DRY - I wouldn't say it is pretty DRY
- Limited logic in controllers
- Views use helper methods if appropriate
- Views use partials if appropriate