Module: ActiveRecord::Enum
- Included in:
- Base
- Defined in:
- lib/active_record/enum.rb
Overview
Declare an enum attribute where the values map to integers in the database, but can be queried by name. Example:
class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
enum status: [ :active, :archived ]
end
# conversation.update! status: 0
conversation.active!
conversation.active? # => true
conversation.status # => "active"
# conversation.update! status: 1
conversation.archived!
conversation.archived? # => true
conversation.status # => "archived"
# conversation.status = 1
conversation.status = "archived"
conversation.status = nil
conversation.status.nil? # => true
conversation.status # => nil
Scopes based on the allowed values of the enum field will be provided as well. With the above example:
Conversation.active
Conversation.not_active
Conversation.archived
Conversation.not_archived
Of course, you can also query them directly if the scopes don’t fit your needs:
Conversation.where(status: [:active, :archived])
Conversation.where.not(status: :active)
You can set the default value from the database declaration, like:
create_table :conversations do |t|
t.column :status, :integer, default: 0
end
Good practice is to let the first declared status be the default.
Finally, it’s also possible to explicitly map the relation between attribute and database integer with a hash:
class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
enum status: { active: 0, archived: 1 }
end
Note that when an array is used, the implicit mapping from the values to database integers is derived from the order the values appear in the array. In the example, :active
is mapped to 0
as it’s the first element, and :archived
is mapped to 1
. In general, the i
-th element is mapped to i-1
in the database.
Therefore, once a value is added to the enum array, its position in the array must be maintained, and new values should only be added to the end of the array. To remove unused values, the explicit hash syntax should be used.
In rare circumstances you might need to access the mapping directly. The mappings are exposed through a class method with the pluralized attribute name, which return the mapping in a HashWithIndifferentAccess
:
Conversation.statuses[:active] # => 0
Conversation.statuses["archived"] # => 1
Use that class method when you need to know the ordinal value of an enum. For example, you can use that when manually building SQL strings:
Conversation.where("status <> ?", Conversation.statuses[:archived])
You can use the :_prefix
or :_suffix
options when you need to define multiple enums with same values. If the passed value is true
, the methods are prefixed/suffixed with the name of the enum. It is also possible to supply a custom value:
class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
enum status: [:active, :archived], _suffix: true
enum comments_status: [:active, :inactive], _prefix: :comments
end
With the above example, the bang and predicate methods along with the associated scopes are now prefixed and/or suffixed accordingly:
conversation.active_status!
conversation.archived_status? # => false
conversation.comments_inactive!
conversation.comments_active? # => false
Defined Under Namespace
Classes: EnumType
Class Method Summary collapse
-
.extended(base) ⇒ Object
:nodoc:.
Instance Method Summary collapse
Class Method Details
.extended(base) ⇒ Object
:nodoc:
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# File 'lib/active_record/enum.rb', line 101 def self.extended(base) # :nodoc: base.class_attribute(:defined_enums, instance_writer: false, default: {}) end |
Instance Method Details
#enum(definitions) ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/active_record/enum.rb', line 150 def enum(definitions) klass = self enum_prefix = definitions.delete(:_prefix) enum_suffix = definitions.delete(:_suffix) enum_scopes = definitions.delete(:_scopes) definitions.each do |name, values| assert_valid_enum_definition_values(values) # statuses = { } enum_values = ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess.new name = name.to_s # def self.statuses() statuses end detect_enum_conflict!(name, name.pluralize, true) singleton_class.define_method(name.pluralize) { enum_values } defined_enums[name] = enum_values detect_enum_conflict!(name, name) detect_enum_conflict!(name, "#{name}=") attr = attribute_alias?(name) ? attribute_alias(name) : name decorate_attribute_type(attr, :enum) do |subtype| EnumType.new(attr, enum_values, subtype) end _enum_methods_module.module_eval do pairs = values.respond_to?(:each_pair) ? values.each_pair : values.each_with_index value_method_names = [] pairs.each do |label, value| if enum_prefix == true prefix = "#{name}_" elsif enum_prefix prefix = "#{enum_prefix}_" end if enum_suffix == true suffix = "_#{name}" elsif enum_suffix suffix = "_#{enum_suffix}" end value_method_name = "#{prefix}#{label}#{suffix}" value_method_names << value_method_name enum_values[label] = value label = label.to_s # def active?() status == "active" end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{value_method_name}?") define_method("#{value_method_name}?") { self[attr] == label } # def active!() update!(status: 0) end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{value_method_name}!") define_method("#{value_method_name}!") { update!(attr => value) } # scope :active, -> { where(status: 0) } # scope :not_active, -> { where.not(status: 0) } if enum_scopes != false klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, value_method_name, true) klass.scope value_method_name, -> { where(attr => value) } klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "not_#{value_method_name}", true) klass.scope "not_#{value_method_name}", -> { where.not(attr => value) } end end klass.send(:detect_negative_enum_conditions!, value_method_names) if enum_scopes != false end enum_values.freeze end end |
#inherited(base) ⇒ Object
:nodoc:
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# File 'lib/active_record/enum.rb', line 105 def inherited(base) # :nodoc: base.defined_enums = defined_enums.deep_dup super end |