method

validates_acceptance_of

Importance_3
Ruby on Rails latest stable (v7.1.3.2) - 1 note - Class: ActiveRecord::Validations::ClassMethods

Method deprecated or moved

This method is deprecated or moved on the latest stable version. The last existing version (v2.3.8) is shown here.

These similar methods exist in v7.1.3.2:

validates_acceptance_of(*attr_names) public

Encapsulates the pattern of wanting to validate the acceptance of a terms of service check box (or similar agreement). Example:

  class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
    validates_acceptance_of :terms_of_service
    validates_acceptance_of :eula, :message => "must be abided"
  end

If the database column does not exist, the terms_of_service attribute is entirely virtual. This check is performed only if terms_of_service is not nil and by default on save.

Configuration options:

  • :message - A custom error message (default is: "must be accepted").
  • :on - Specifies when this validation is active (default is :save, other options :create, :update).
  • :allow_nil - Skip validation if attribute is nil (default is true).
  • :accept - Specifies value that is considered accepted. The default value is a string "1", which makes it easy to relate to an HTML checkbox. This should be set to true if you are validating a database column, since the attribute is typecast from "1" to true before validation.
  • :if - Specifies a method, proc or string to call to determine if the validation should occur (e.g. :if =&gt; :allow_validation, or :if =&gt; Proc.new { |user| user.signup_step &gt; 2 }). The method, proc or string should return or evaluate to a true or false value.
  • :unless - Specifies a method, proc or string to call to determine if the validation should not occur (e.g. :unless =&gt; :skip_validation, or :unless =&gt; Proc.new { |user| user.signup_step &lt;= 2 }). The method, proc or string should return or evaluate to a true or false value.
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December 2, 2010 - (<= v3.0.0)
1 thank

Checks if attribute is equal to '1' by default

It’s easy to overlook the :accept option which dictates that the attribute shall be ‘1’, not ‘yes’, not true, but ‘1’ only for validation to pass.

For ‘1’ shall the value be, no more, no less. ‘1’ shall be the value thou shalt validate, and thy validation shall check for ‘1’. ‘2’ shalt not thou validate, neither ‘3’, nor ‘0’, excepting that thou shall then set the value to ‘1’. true is right out. Once the value ‘1’, being the value of the attribute named, then thou shall have validation and thy object shall be valid.