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- What's this?
Active Model Serialization
Provides a basic serialization to a serializable_hash for your objects.
A minimal implementation could be:
class Person include ActiveModel::Serialization attr_accessor :name def attributes {'name' => nil} end end
Which would provide you with:
person = Person.new person.serializable_hash # => {"name"=>nil} person.name = "Bob" person.serializable_hash # => {"name"=>"Bob"}
An attributes hash must be defined and should contain any attributes you need to be serialized. Attributes must be strings, not symbols. When called, serializable hash will use instance methods that match the name of the attributes hash’s keys. In order to override this behavior, take a look at the private method read_attribute_for_serialization.
ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON module automatically includes the +ActiveModel::Serialization+ module, so there is no need to explicitly include +ActiveModel::Serialization+.
A minimal implementation including JSON would be:
class Person include ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON attr_accessor :name def attributes {'name' => nil} end end
Which would provide you with:
person = Person.new person.serializable_hash # => {"name"=>nil} person.as_json # => {"name"=>nil} person.to_json # => "{\"name\":null}" person.name = "Bob" person.serializable_hash # => {"name"=>"Bob"} person.as_json # => {"name"=>"Bob"} person.to_json # => "{\"name\":\"Bob\"}"
Valid options are :only, :except, :methods and :include. The following are all valid examples:
person.serializable_hash(only: 'name') person.serializable_hash(include: :address) person.serializable_hash(include: { address: { only: 'city' }})
:include is also valid option
my_company.serializable_hash(:include => [:people])