I think your first suggestion is the way to go. 
Scaffold does have the benetif of giving the new-comer a first shot of 
something "working", but as you rightly said, it tends to confuse a little.
Paul

On Thursday, March 8, 2012 7:30:39 PM UTC+1, Ryan Bigg wrote:
>
>  Hello friends, 
>
> It's been fun having the scaffold generator exist as a part of Rails since 
> The Beginning Of Time, but I think its time is now up. It has been abused 
> time and time again, and most often leads to confusion amongst people who 
> are new to Rails.
>
> This confusion happens when a user first generates a scaffold and sees 
> that it is good. They can perform CRUD actions on a resource using one 
> command?! WOW!
>
> Then they try to modify the scaffold and run into problems. First of all: 
> how do they add an action to the controller? Do they need to run another 
> command? How do they then define a route for that action? A template?
>
> If they were to *not* use the scaffold generator from the beginning, I 
> believe they would have less confusion. They would know how to add another 
> action to the controller and a template for that action because this would 
> be how they're doing it from the start. Learning how to define a route for 
> a new action in the controller is something easily learnable by reading the 
> routing guide.
>
> I think that we can fix this problem in one of two ways, the latter more 
> extreme than the first one. 
>
> The first way is that we *completely change the Getting Started Guide to 
> simply *mention* the scaffold generator*, but then show people the 
> "correct" way of generating a controller (rails g controller) and adding 
> actions to it one by one, adding a model as its needed, and using similar 
> practices to how you would do it in the "real world".
>
> The second way, and sorry if this sounds a little extreme, is to *completely 
> remove the scaffold generator from the core of Rails* itself. This means 
> that there wouldn't even be the option to run the scaffold generator for 
> newbies. You could then extract this out into a gem if you *really* wanted 
> people to have the option for it. However, if this path was taken it should 
> be made clear that this is not the "sanctioned" way to create controllers.
>
> Thoughts?
>  

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