| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Confirm a record has not already been destroyed before decrementing counter cache
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/associations/builder/belongs_to.rb
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This reverts commit a79bfa92e7bdc31b346d13ee5447d3fdac382bfb.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
We shouldn't introducing deprecations in point releases.
It will be deprecated in 4.0 instead.
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This change uses Module.redefine_method as defined in ActiveSupport.
Making Module.define_method public would be as clean in the code, and
would also emit warnings when redefining an association. That is pretty
messy given current tests, so I'm leaving it for someone else to decide
what approach is better.
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Instead of generating association methods directly in the model
class, they are generated in an anonymous module which
is then included in the model class. There is one such module
for each association. The only subtlety is that the
generated_attributes_methods module (from ActiveModel) must
be forced to be included before association methods are created
so that attribute methods will not shadow association methods.
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issue #402.
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it was properly removed
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After a long list of discussion about the performance problem from using varargs and the reason that we can't find a great pair for it, it would be best to remove support for it for now.
It will come back if we can find a good pair for it. For now, Bon Voyage, `#among?`.
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suggestion!
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There're a lot of places in Rails source code which make a lot of sense to switching to Object#in? or Object#either? instead of using [].include?.
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The old method of redefining destroy meant that clearing the HABTM join table would happen as long as the call to destroy succeeded. Which meant if there was a before_destroy that stopped the instance being destroyed using normal means (returning false, raising ActiveRecord::Rollback) rather than exceptional means the join table would be cleared even though the instance wasn't destroyed. Doing it in an after_destroy hook avoids this and has the advantage of happening inside the DB transaction too.
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callbacks etc) rather than calling a whole bunch of methods with rather long names.
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