define_callbacks
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- What's this?
define_callbacks(*callbacks)
public
Define sets of events in the object lifecycle that support callbacks.
define_callbacks :validate define_callbacks :initialize, :save, :destroy
Options
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:terminator - Determines when a before filter will halt the callback chain, preventing following callbacks from being called and the event from being triggered. This is a string to be eval’ed. The result of the callback is available in the result variable.
define_callbacks :validate, :terminator => "result == false"
In this example, if any before validate callbacks returns false, other callbacks are not executed. Defaults to “false”, meaning no value halts the chain.
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:rescuable - By default, after filters are not executed if the given block or a before filter raises an error. By setting this option to true exception raised by given block is stored and after executing all the after callbacks the stored exception is raised.
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:scope - Indicates which methods should be executed when an object is used as a callback.
class Audit def before(caller) puts 'Audit: before is called' end def before_save(caller) puts 'Audit: before_save is called' end end class Account include ActiveSupport::Callbacks define_callbacks :save set_callback :save, :before, Audit.new def save run_callbacks :save do puts 'save in main' end end end
In the above case whenever you save an account the method Audit#before will be called. On the other hand
define_callbacks :save, :scope => [:kind, :name]
would trigger Audit#before_save instead. That’s constructed by calling #{kind}_#{name} on the given instance. In this case “kind” is “before” and “name” is “save”. In this context :kind and :name have special meanings: :kind refers to the kind of callback (before/after/around) and :name refers to the method on which callbacks are being defined.
A declaration like
define_callbacks :save, :scope => [:name]
would call Audit#save.