Well that's the first thing I tried and I couldn't get it to work.

If I try to use any reference like '$this->Part->Price' from the
Prices controller I get:
Undefined property: PricesController::$Part [APP/controllers/
prices_controller.php, line 52]




On May 15, 5:48 am, euromark <[email protected]> wrote:
> despite the fact that your code doesnt really look too cakish
> the correct approach to access related models is through chaining:
>
> $this->Part->Price->foo();
>
> On 15 Mai, 06:43, turbo2ltr <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Parts hasMany Prices.
> > Parts belongsTo Prices
>
> > The idea is a part can have many prices but Part will have one Price
> > ID that will indicate the default price.
>
> > In the Prices controller, how would I go about updating the Parts
> > field?  I searched around and it seems to be a common problem, but the
> > answers didn't get me anywhere.
>
> > One of my attempts that doesn't work.. this code is if the Price Add
> > form is submitted and the user indicated it was the default (prime):
>
> > $this->Part->id = $this->data['Price']['part_id'];
> > $partdata = $this->Part->read();
> > $partdata['Part']['prime_price_id'] = $this->Price->getLastInsertId();
> > $this->Part->save($this->data);
>
>

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