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Symbolize (attribute values)This plugin introduces an easy way to use symbols for values of attributes. Symbolized attributes return a ruby symbol (or nil) as their value and can be set using :symbols or “strings”.
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Install¶ ↑
Gemgem install symbolize
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Gemfilegem 'symbolize'
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AboutJust use “symbolize :attribute” in your model, and the specified attribute will return symbol values and can be set using symbols (setting string values works, which is important when using forms).
On schema DBs, the attribute should be a string (varchar) column.
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UsageActiveRecord:
class Contact < ActiveRecord::Base symbolize :kind, :in => [:im, :mobile, :email], :scopes => true
Mongoid:
class Contact include Mongoid::Symbolize symbolize :kind, :in => [:im, :mobile, :email], :scopes => true
Other examples:
symbolize :so, :in => { :linux => "Linux", :mac => "Mac OS X" }, :scopes => true # Allow blank symbolize :gui, :in => [:gnome, :kde, :xfce], :allow_blank => true # Don`t i18n symbolize :browser, :in => [:firefox, :opera], :i18n => false, :methods => true # Scopes symbolize :angry, :in => [true, false], :scopes => true # AR symbolize :angry, :type => Boolean, :scopes => true # Mongoid # Don`t validate symbolize :lang, :in => [:ruby, :js, :c, :erlang], :validate => false # Default symbolize :kind, :in => [:admin, :manager, :user], :default => :user
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in/withinYou can provide a hash like for values allowed on the field, e.g.: {:value => “Human text”} or an array of keys to run i18n on. Booleans are also supported. See below.
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ValidateSet to false to avoid the validation of the input. Useful for a dropdown with an “other” option textfield.
symbolize :color, :in => [:green, :red, :blue], :validate => false
There’s is also allow_(blank|nil): As you expect.
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methodIf you provide the method option, some fancy boolean methods will be added: In our User example, browser has this option, so you can do:
@user.firefox? @user.opera?
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BooleansIts possible to use boolean fields also. Looks better in Mongoid.
# ActiveRecord symbolize :switch, :in => [true, false] # Mongoid symbolize :switch, :type => Boolean ... switch: "true": On "false": Off "nil": Unknown
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i18nIf you don`t provide a hash with values, it will try i18n:
activerecord: or mongoid: symbolizes: user: gui: gnome: Gnome Desktop Enviroment kde: K Desktop Enviroment xfce: XFCE4 gender: female: Girl male: Boy
You can skip i18n lookup with :i18n => false
symbolize :style, :in => [:rock, :punk, :funk, :jazz], :i18n => false
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ScopesWith the ‘:scopes => true’ option, you may filter/read/write easily:
User.sex(:female).each ... # => User.where({ :gender => :female })
Now, if you provide the ‘:scopes => :shallow’ option, fancy named scopes will be added to the class directly. In our User example, gender has male/female options, so you can do:
User.female.each ... # => User.where({ :gender => :female })
You can chain named scopes as well:
User.female.mac => User.all :conditions => { :gender => :female, :so => :mac }
For boolean colums you can use
User.angry => User.find(:all, :conditions => { :angry => true }) User.not_angry => User.find(:all, :conditions => { :angry => false }) ( or with_[attribute] and without_[attribute] )
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DefaultAs the name suggest, the symbol you choose as default will be set in new objects automatically. Mongoid only for now.
symbolize :mood, :in => [:happy, :sad, :euphoric], :default => (MarvinDay ? :sad : :happy) User.new.mood # It may print :happy
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Rails Form ExampleYou may call ‘Class.get_<attribute>_values` anywhere to get a nice array. Works nice with dropdowns. Examples:
class Coffee symbolize :genetic, :in => [:arabica, :robusta, :blend] end - form_for(@coffee) do |f| = f.label :genetic = f.select :genetic, Coffee.get_genetic_values
Somewhere on a view:
= select_tag :kind, Coffee.get_genetic_values
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SpecsRun the adapter independently:
$ rspec spec/symbolize/mongoid_spec.rb $ rspec spec/symbolize/active_record_spec.rb
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NotesThis fork: github.com/nofxx/symbolize