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author | Francesco Rodriguez <lrodriguezsanc@gmail.com> | 2012-07-31 11:43:17 -0500 |
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committer | Francesco Rodriguez <lrodriguezsanc@gmail.com> | 2012-07-31 11:46:13 -0500 |
commit | 7b7501b2e591718897f8d4a1d201b6d72f0fe7cd (patch) | |
tree | 63220794f9f4826b365607cfaad384f43bc66a90 | |
parent | d9ac5b2b04e3453a602498753504373cff3e4824 (diff) | |
download | rails-7b7501b2e591718897f8d4a1d201b6d72f0fe7cd.tar.gz rails-7b7501b2e591718897f8d4a1d201b6d72f0fe7cd.tar.bz2 rails-7b7501b2e591718897f8d4a1d201b6d72f0fe7cd.zip |
update ActiveModel::Observer documentation [ci skip]
-rw-r--r-- | activemodel/lib/active_model/observing.rb | 53 |
1 files changed, 32 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/activemodel/lib/active_model/observing.rb b/activemodel/lib/active_model/observing.rb index aae0d3a2ef..7da9246911 100644 --- a/activemodel/lib/active_model/observing.rb +++ b/activemodel/lib/active_model/observing.rb @@ -236,15 +236,15 @@ module ActiveModel # behavior outside the original class. This is a great way to reduce the # clutter that normally comes when the model class is burdened with # functionality that doesn't pertain to the core responsibility of the - # class. Example: + # class. # # class CommentObserver < ActiveModel::Observer # def after_save(comment) - # Notifications.comment("admin@do.com", "New comment was posted", comment).deliver + # Notifications.comment('admin@do.com', 'New comment was posted', comment).deliver # end # end # - # This Observer sends an email when a Comment#save is finished. + # This Observer sends an email when a <tt>Comment#save</tt> is finished. # # class ContactObserver < ActiveModel::Observer # def after_create(contact) @@ -261,44 +261,50 @@ module ActiveModel # == Observing a class that can't be inferred # # Observers will by default be mapped to the class with which they share a - # name. So CommentObserver will be tied to observing Comment, ProductManagerObserver - # to ProductManager, and so on. If you want to name your observer differently than - # the class you're interested in observing, you can use the <tt>Observer.observe</tt> - # class method which takes either the concrete class (Product) or a symbol for that - # class (:product): + # name. So <tt>CommentObserver</tt> will be tied to observing <tt>Comment</tt>, + # <tt>ProductManagerObserver</tt> to <tt>ProductManager</tt>, and so on. If + # you want to name your observer differently than the class you're interested + # in observing, you can use the <tt>Observer.observe</tt> class method which + # takes either the concrete class (<tt>Product</tt>) or a symbol for that + # class (<tt>:product</tt>): # # class AuditObserver < ActiveModel::Observer # observe :account # # def after_update(account) - # AuditTrail.new(account, "UPDATED") + # AuditTrail.new(account, 'UPDATED') # end # end # - # If the audit observer needs to watch more than one kind of object, this can be - # specified with multiple arguments: + # If the audit observer needs to watch more than one kind of object, this can + # be specified with multiple arguments: # # class AuditObserver < ActiveModel::Observer # observe :account, :balance # # def after_update(record) - # AuditTrail.new(record, "UPDATED") + # AuditTrail.new(record, 'UPDATED') # end # end # - # The AuditObserver will now act on both updates to Account and Balance by treating - # them both as records. + # The <tt>AuditObserver</tt> will now act on both updates to <tt>Account</tt> + # and <tt>Balance</tt> by treating them both as records. # - # If you're using an Observer in a Rails application with Active Record, be sure to - # read about the necessary configuration in the documentation for + # If you're using an Observer in a Rails application with Active Record, be + # sure to read about the necessary configuration in the documentation for # ActiveRecord::Observer. - # class Observer include Singleton extend ActiveSupport::DescendantsTracker class << self # Attaches the observer to the supplied model classes. + # + # class AuditObserver < ActiveModel::Observer + # observe :account, :balance + # end + # + # AuditObserver.observed_classes # => [Account, Balance] def observe(*models) models.flatten! models.collect! { |model| model.respond_to?(:to_sym) ? model.to_s.camelize.constantize : model } @@ -307,6 +313,8 @@ module ActiveModel # Returns an array of Classes to observe. # + # AccountObserver.observed_classes # => [Account] + # # You can override this instead of using the +observe+ helper. # # class AuditObserver < ActiveModel::Observer @@ -318,8 +326,11 @@ module ActiveModel Array(observed_class) end - # The class observed by default is inferred from the observer's class name: - # assert_equal Person, PersonObserver.observed_class + # Returns the class observed by default. It's inferred from the observer's + # class name. + # + # PersonObserver.observed_class # => Person + # AccountObserver.observed_class # => Account def observed_class name[/(.*)Observer/, 1].try :constantize end @@ -327,7 +338,7 @@ module ActiveModel # Start observing the declared classes and their subclasses. # Called automatically by the instance method. - def initialize + def initialize #:nodoc: observed_classes.each { |klass| add_observer!(klass) } end @@ -355,7 +366,7 @@ module ActiveModel end # Returns true if notifications are disabled for this object. - def disabled_for?(object) + def disabled_for?(object) #:nodoc: klass = object.class return false unless klass.respond_to?(:observers) klass.observers.disabled_for?(self) |