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author | Sean Griffin <sean@seantheprogrammer.com> | 2016-04-12 10:39:32 -0600 |
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committer | Sean Griffin <sean@seantheprogrammer.com> | 2016-04-12 10:42:28 -0600 |
commit | 714ab8cb5976587470c8487720094c1efb2ba9a2 (patch) | |
tree | 0317fb226dfb61e783fe47b0c3496d53d557ea85 /activesupport/lib/active_support/logger.rb | |
parent | d6769f4d106ee6f9a3bbad925098260bdac5f799 (diff) | |
download | rails-714ab8cb5976587470c8487720094c1efb2ba9a2.tar.gz rails-714ab8cb5976587470c8487720094c1efb2ba9a2.tar.bz2 rails-714ab8cb5976587470c8487720094c1efb2ba9a2.zip |
Allow symbols using "dot notation" to be passed to where
In 04ac5655be91f49cd4dfe2838df96213502fb274 I assumed that we would
never want to pass the "table_name.column_name" form to where with a
symbol. However, in Ruby 2.2 and later, you can quote symbols using the
new hash syntax, so it's a semi-reasonable thing to do if we want to
support the dot notation (which I'd rather deprecate, but that would be
too painful of a migration).
Instead we've changed the definition of "this is a table name with a
dot" to when the value associated is a hash. It would make very little
sense to write `where("table_name.column_name": { foo: :bar })` in any
scenario (other than equality for a JSON column which we don't support
through `where` in this way).
Close #24514.
Diffstat (limited to 'activesupport/lib/active_support/logger.rb')
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