- Understand the concept of AR Lifecycle methods
- Use
before_save
,before_create
, andbefore_validation
- Understand when to use
before_validation
vs.before_save
Now that we are integrating ActiveRecord
into Rails, we should note that
we can make bits of code run whenever something happens in our model: like when
it's created (but not yet saved to the database), saved to the database, or
even deleted. Everything we cover here is called an "Active Record Lifecycle
Callback". Many people just call them callbacks. It's a bit shorter.
Take a look at the blog app that is included. Be sure to run the migrations
before you start learning from Rails (we do this with rake db:migrate
)! We
have a Post
model and a few views. The Post
belongs_to
an Author
.
Note also that in the Post
model you'll notice a validation to make sure
that post titles are in title case. Title case means every word starts with a
capital letter.
So, in order to make sure that our validation always passes, before every save,
we want Rails to run our title-case algorithm on the title
of the Post
.
Let's create the make_title_case
method then.
# post.rb
def make_title_case
self.title = self.title.titlecase
end
To make sure that all of our Post
s have the correctly-formatted title, we're
going to run make_title_case
during the first of the available lifecycle
"points:" before_save
. Our validation and lifecycle callback will make sure
our posts are always title-cased.
We write lifecycle callbacks similarly to how you use has_many
or validates
and place this "hook" onto saving at the top of our model file. Since lifecycle
methods run "as if by magic," we won't see them being called explicitly in one
method by another method versus Rails running it for us, we put such statements
at the top so that it catches other programmers' eyes.
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
validate :is_title_case
# New Code!!
before_save :make_title_case
private
def is_title_case
if title.split.any?{|w|w[0].upcase != w[0]}
errors.add(:title, "Title must be in title case")
end
end
def make_title_case
# Rails provides a String#titlecase method
self.title = self.title.titlecase
end
end
We'd expect that whenever Rails persists Post
models to the database, (so
#save
and #create
) this code will get run. Let's open up the console
(rails c
) and test it out:
p = Post.create(title: "testing")
# (0.1ms) begin transaction
# (0.1ms) rollback transaction
# => #<Post id: nil, title: "testing", description: nil, created_at: nil, updated_at: nil, post_status: nil, author_id: nil>
Wait! There was no INSERT
SQL command issued. In fact, we see the rollback transaction
line. That means that it didn't actually save to the database. If
we do p.valid?
right now it will return false
.
This feels surprising. Most of the time when we have this feeling while programming it's because we didn't understand something subtle. This is true here.
It turns out that the before_save
is called after validation occurs. So
Rails goes is valid?
"Nope! Stop!", and never makes it to before_save
. We
missed that subtlety.
Let's change our callback to the before_validation
callback. This one happens
before validation. That means that first our before_validation
code
works, which title cases the title, then the validation runs, which passes!
Here is the final code:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
validate :is_title_case
# New Code!!
before_validation :make_title_case
private
def is_title_case
if title.split.any?{|w|w[0].upcase != w[0]}
errors.add(:title, "Title must be in title case")
end
end
def make_title_case
self.title = self.title.titlecase
end
end
Here is a rule of thumb: Whenever you are modifying an attribute of the
model, use before_validation
. If you are doing some other action, then use
before_save
.
Now let's do something that (properly) belongs in the before_save
. We use
before_save
for actions that need to occur that aren't modifying the model
itself. For example, whenever you save to the database, let's send an email to
the Author
alerting them that the post was just saved!
This is a perfect before_save
action. It doesn't modify the model so there is
no validation weirdness, and we don't want to email the user if the Post is
invalid. That would be just mean! So if you had some method called
email_author_about_post
you would modify your Post
model to look like this:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
validate :is_title_case
before_validation :make_title_case
# New Code!!
before_save :email_author_about_post
private
def is_title_case
if title.split.any?{|w|w[0].upcase != w[0]}
errors.add(:title, "Title must be in title case")
end
end
def email_author_about_post
# Not implemented.
# For more information: https://guides.rubyonrails.org/action_mailer_basics.html
end
def make_title_case
self.title = self.title.titlecase
end
end
Before you move on, let's cover one last callback that is useful:
before_create
. before_create
is very close to before_save
with one major
difference: it only gets called when a model is created for the first time.
This means not every time the object is persisted, just when it is new.
For more information on all of the callbacks available to you, check out this amazing rails guide
View ActiveRecord Lifecycle Methods on Learn.co and start learning to code for free.