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-rw-r--r--guides/source/caching_with_rails.md6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
index 9a56233e4a..3a1a1ccfe6 100644
--- a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
+++ b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
@@ -175,11 +175,11 @@ your app will serve stale data. To fix this, we tie the models together with
the `touch` method:
```ruby
-class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
+class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :games
end
-class Game < ActiveRecord::Base
+class Game < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :product, touch: true
end
```
@@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ The most efficient way to implement low-level caching is using the `Rails.cache.
Consider the following example. An application has a `Product` model with an instance method that looks up the product’s price on a competing website. The data returned by this method would be perfect for low-level caching:
```ruby
-class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
+class Product < ApplicationRecord
def competing_price
Rails.cache.fetch("#{cache_key}/competing_price", expires_in: 12.hours) do
Competitor::API.find_price(id)