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Diffstat (limited to 'guides/source/active_record_validations.md')
-rw-r--r-- | guides/source/active_record_validations.md | 72 |
1 files changed, 54 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/guides/source/active_record_validations.md b/guides/source/active_record_validations.md index dd7adf09a2..2737237c1a 100644 --- a/guides/source/active_record_validations.md +++ b/guides/source/active_record_validations.md @@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ false` as an argument. This technique should be used with caution. ### `valid?` and `invalid?` -Before saving an ActiveRecord object, Rails runs your validations. +Before saving an Active Record object, Rails runs your validations. If these validations produce any errors, Rails does not save the object. You can also run these validations on your own. `valid?` triggers your validations @@ -278,12 +278,6 @@ form was submitted. This is typically used when the user needs to agree to your application's terms of service, confirm that some text is read, or any similar concept. -This validation is very specific to web applications and this -'acceptance' does not need to be recorded anywhere in your database. If you -don't have a field for it, the helper will just create a virtual attribute. If -the field does exist in your database, the `accept` option must be set to -`true` or else the validation will not run. - ```ruby class Person < ApplicationRecord validates :terms_of_service, acceptance: true @@ -292,16 +286,31 @@ end This check is performed only if `terms_of_service` is not `nil`. The default error message for this helper is _"must be accepted"_. +You can also pass custom message via the `message` option. -It can receive an `:accept` option, which determines the value that will be -considered acceptance. It defaults to "1" and can be easily changed. +```ruby +class Person < ApplicationRecord + validates :terms_of_service, acceptance: true, message: 'must be abided' +end +``` + +It can also receive an `:accept` option, which determines the allowed values +that will be considered as accepted. It defaults to `['1', true]` and can be +easily changed. ```ruby class Person < ApplicationRecord validates :terms_of_service, acceptance: { accept: 'yes' } + validates :eula, acceptance: { accept: ['TRUE', 'accepted'] } end ``` +This validation is very specific to web applications and this +'acceptance' does not need to be recorded anywhere in your database. If you +don't have a field for it, the helper will just create a virtual attribute. If +the field does exist in your database, the `accept` option must be set to +or include `true` or else the validation will not run. + ### `validates_associated` You should use this helper when your model has associations with other models @@ -383,7 +392,8 @@ The `exclusion` helper has an option `:in` that receives the set of values that will not be accepted for the validated attributes. The `:in` option has an alias called `:within` that you can use for the same purpose, if you'd like to. This example uses the `:message` option to show how you can include the -attribute's value. +attribute's value. For full options to the message argument please see the +[message documentation](#message). The default error message is _"is reserved"_. @@ -418,7 +428,8 @@ end The `inclusion` helper has an option `:in` that receives the set of values that will be accepted. The `:in` option has an alias called `:within` that you can use for the same purpose, if you'd like to. The previous example uses the -`:message` option to show how you can include the attribute's value. +`:message` option to show how you can include the attribute's value. For full +options please see the [message documentation](#message). The default error message for this helper is _"is not included in the list"_. @@ -505,6 +516,8 @@ constraints to acceptable values: * `:less_than_or_equal_to` - Specifies the value must be less than or equal to the supplied value. The default error message for this option is _"must be less than or equal to %{count}"_. +* `:other_than` - Specifies the value must be other than the supplied value. + The default error message for this option is _"must be other than %{count}"_. * `:odd` - Specifies the value must be an odd number if set to true. The default error message for this option is _"must be odd"_. * `:even` - Specifies the value must be an even number if set to true. The @@ -757,6 +770,9 @@ class Coffee < ApplicationRecord end ``` +For full options to the message argument please see the +[message documentation](#message). + ### `:allow_blank` The `:allow_blank` option is similar to the `:allow_nil` option. This option @@ -781,9 +797,10 @@ for each validation helper. The `:message` option accepts a `String` or `Proc`. A `String` `:message` value can optionally contain any/all of `%{value}`, `%{attribute}`, and `%{model}` which will be dynamically replaced when -validation fails. +validation fails. This replacement is done using the I18n gem, and the +placeholders must match exactly, no spaces are allowed. -A `Proc` `:message` value is given two arguments: a message key for i18n, and +A `Proc` `:message` value is given two arguments: the object being validated, and a hash with `:model`, `:attribute`, and `:value` key-value pairs. ```ruby @@ -799,10 +816,10 @@ class Person < ApplicationRecord # Proc validates :username, uniqueness: { - # key = "activerecord.errors.models.person.attributes.username.taken" + # object = person object being validated # data = { model: "Person", attribute: "Username", value: <username> } - message: ->(key, data) do - "#{data[:value]} taken! Try again #{Time.zone.tomorrow}" + message: ->(object, data) do + "Hey #{object.name}!, #{data[:value]} is taken already! Try again #{Time.zone.tomorrow}" end } end @@ -830,6 +847,25 @@ class Person < ApplicationRecord end ``` +You can also use `on:` to define custom context. +Custom contexts need to be triggered explicitly +by passing name of the context to `valid?`, `invalid?` or `save`. + +```ruby +class Person < ApplicationRecord + validates :email, uniqueness: true, on: :account_setup + validates :age, numericality: true, on: :account_setup +end + +person = Person.new +``` + +`person.valid?(:account_setup)` executes both the validations +without saving the model. And `person.save(context: :account_setup)` +validates `person` in `account_setup` context before saving. +On explicit triggers, model is validated by +validations of only that context and validations without context. + Strict Validations ------------------ @@ -1196,9 +1232,9 @@ person.errors[:name] person.errors.clear person.errors.empty? # => true -p.save # => false +person.save # => false -p.errors[:name] +person.errors[:name] # => ["can't be blank", "is too short (minimum is 3 characters)"] ``` |