attribute_predicates adds automatic generation of predicate methods (truth accessors) when defining attributes using attr, attr_reader, attr_writer, and attr_accessor.
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API
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Development
Testing
Source
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git://github.com/pluginaweek/attribute_predicates.git
Mailing List
Description
When you define attributes within your classes and want to use the predicate-style methods (i.e. “def foo?; end”), then you have to define these yourself. This is a repetitive task especially if you want to query attributes that may not necessarily contain just true/false. For example, an attribute may contain 0, or the string “false”. In this case, you would need to do special checks to see whether or not the value is really false.
attribute_predicates makes it easy by automatically generating predicate-style methods for all attributes that are created using attr, attr_reader, attr_writer, and attr_accessor. In addition, there is support for ActiveRecord's non-standard truth accessor implementation (see below).
All of these shortcuts have the same interface and meaning as you would normally find.
Usage
Ruby Attributes
attr
This method takes a symbol (the name of the attribute) and an optional argument for whether or not the attribute is writeable. For example,
module Mod attr :is_okay, true end
is equivalent to:
module Mod def is_okay @is_okay end def is_okay=(val) @is_okay = value end def is_okay? !is_okay.blank? end end
attr_reader
This method is equivalent to calling attr(symbol, false) on each symbol in turn. For example,
module Mod attr_reader :is_good, :is_bad end Mod.instance_methods.sort #=> ["is_bad", "is_bad?", "is_good", "is_good?"]
attr_writer
This method creates an accessor and predicate method for each symbol in turn. For example,
module Mod attr_writer :is_good, :is_bad end Mod.instance_methods.sort #=> ["is_bad=", "is_bad?", "is_good=", "is_good?"]
attr_accessor
This method is equivalent to calling attr(symbol, true) on each symbol in turn. For example,
module Mod attr_accessor :is_good, :is_bad end Mod.instance_methods.sort #=> ["is_bad", "is_bad=", "is_bad?", "is_good", "is_good=", "is_good?"]
ActiveRecord Attributes
The predicate method has a slightly more complex implementation for subclasses of ActiveRecord::Base. It is built from how ActiveRecord implemented querying attributes. The following lists show which values will return false/true:
For String, the following values return true:
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“true”
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“t”
For Integer, the following values return true:
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1
For all other types, the predicate will return false.
Testing
Before you can run any tests, the following gem must be installed:
To run against a specific version of Rails:
rake test RAILS_FRAMEWORK_ROOT=/path/to/rails
Dependencies
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Rails 2.0 or later
References
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Yurii Rashkovskii - Boolean Attributes in Ruby
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Evan Weaver - truth accessors in rails