attribute
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attribute(name, cast_type = nil, default: NO_DEFAULT_PROVIDED, **options)
public
Defines an attribute with a type on this model. It will override the type of existing attributes if needed. This allows control over how values are converted to and from SQL when assigned to a model. It also changes the behavior of values passed to {ActiveRecord::Base.where}[rdoc-ref:QueryMethods#where]. This will let you use your domain objects across much of Active Record, without having to rely on implementation details or monkey patching.
name The name of the methods to define attribute methods for, and the column which this will persist to.
cast_type A symbol such as :string or :integer, or a type object to be used for this attribute. See the examples below for more information about providing custom type objects.
Options
The following options are accepted:
default The default value to use when no value is provided. If this option is not passed, the previous default value (if any) will be used. Otherwise, the default will be nil.
array (PostgreSQL only) specifies that the type should be an array (see the examples below).
range (PostgreSQL only) specifies that the type should be a range (see the examples below).
When using a symbol for cast_type, extra options are forwarded to the constructor of the type object.
Examples
The type detected by Active Record can be overridden.
# db/schema.rb create_table :store_listings, force: true do |t| t.decimal :price_in_cents end # app/models/store_listing.rb class StoreListing < ActiveRecord::Base end store_listing = StoreListing.new(price_in_cents: '10.1') # before store_listing.price_in_cents # => BigDecimal(10.1) class StoreListing < ActiveRecord::Base attribute :price_in_cents, :integer end # after store_listing.price_in_cents # => 10
A default can also be provided.
# db/schema.rb create_table :store_listings, force: true do |t| t.string :my_string, default: "original default" end StoreListing.new.my_string # => "original default" # app/models/store_listing.rb class StoreListing < ActiveRecord::Base attribute :my_string, :string, default: "new default" end StoreListing.new.my_string # => "new default" class Product < ActiveRecord::Base attribute :my_default_proc, :datetime, default: -> { Time.now } end Product.new.my_default_proc # => 2015-05-30 11:04:48 -0600 sleep 1 Product.new.my_default_proc # => 2015-05-30 11:04:49 -0600
Attributes do not need to be backed by a database column.
# app/models/my_model.rb class MyModel < ActiveRecord::Base attribute :my_string, :string attribute :my_int_array, :integer, array: true attribute :my_float_range, :float, range: true end model = MyModel.new( my_string: "string", my_int_array: ["1", "2", "3"], my_float_range: "[1,3.5]", ) model.attributes # => { my_string: "string", my_int_array: [1, 2, 3], my_float_range: 1.0..3.5 }
Passing options to the type constructor
# app/models/my_model.rb class MyModel < ActiveRecord::Base attribute :small_int, :integer, limit: 2 end MyModel.create(small_int: 65537) # => Error: 65537 is out of range for the limit of two bytes
Creating Custom Types
Users may also define their own custom types, as long as they respond to the methods defined on the value type. The method deserialize or cast will be called on your type object, with raw input from the database or from your controllers. See ActiveModel::Type::Value for the expected API. It is recommended that your type objects inherit from an existing type, or from ActiveRecord::Type::Value
class MoneyType < ActiveRecord::Type::Integer def cast(value) if !value.kind_of?(Numeric) && value.include?('$') price_in_dollars = value.gsub(/\$/, '').to_f super(price_in_dollars * 100) else super end end end # config/initializers/types.rb ActiveRecord::Type.register(:money, MoneyType) # app/models/store_listing.rb class StoreListing < ActiveRecord::Base attribute :price_in_cents, :money end store_listing = StoreListing.new(price_in_cents: '$10.00') store_listing.price_in_cents # => 1000
For more details on creating custom types, see the documentation for ActiveModel::Type::Value. For more details on registering your types to be referenced by a symbol, see ActiveRecord::Type.register. You can also pass a type object directly, in place of a symbol.
Querying
When {ActiveRecord::Base.where}[rdoc-ref:QueryMethods#where] is called, it will use the type defined by the model class to convert the value to SQL, calling serialize on your type object. For example:
class Money < Struct.new(:amount, :currency) end class MoneyType < ActiveRecord::Type::Value def initialize(currency_converter:) @currency_converter = currency_converter end # value will be the result of +deserialize+ or # +cast+. Assumed to be an instance of +Money+ in # this case. def serialize(value) value_in_bitcoins = @currency_converter.convert_to_bitcoins(value) value_in_bitcoins.amount end end # config/initializers/types.rb ActiveRecord::Type.register(:money, MoneyType) # app/models/product.rb class Product < ActiveRecord::Base currency_converter = ConversionRatesFromTheInternet.new attribute :price_in_bitcoins, :money, currency_converter: currency_converter end Product.where(price_in_bitcoins: Money.new(5, "USD")) # SELECT * FROM products WHERE price_in_bitcoins = 0.02230 Product.where(price_in_bitcoins: Money.new(5, "GBP")) # SELECT * FROM products WHERE price_in_bitcoins = 0.03412
Dirty Tracking
The type of an attribute is given the opportunity to change how dirty tracking is performed. The methods changed? and changed_in_place? will be called from ActiveModel::Dirty. See the documentation for those methods in ActiveModel::Type::Value for more details.