| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The type code is actually quite accessible, and I'm planning to
encourage people to look at the files in the `type` folder to learn more
about how it works. This will help reduce the noise from code that is
less about type casting, and more about random AR nonsense.
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The same is not true of `define_attribute`, which is meant to be the low
level no-magic API that sits underneath. The differences between the two
APIs are:
- `attribute`
- Lazy (the attribute will be defined after the schema has loaded)
- Allows either a type object or a symbol
- `define_attribute`
- Runs immediately (might get trampled by schema loading)
- Requires a type object
This was the last blocker in terms of public interface requirements
originally discussed for this feature back in May. All the
implementation blockers have been cleared, so this feature is probably
ready for release (pending one more look-over by me).
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The types that are affected by `time_zone_aware_attributes` (which is on
by default) have been made configurable, in case this is a breaking
change for existing applications.
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The user is able to pass PG string literals in 4.1, and have it
converted to an array. This is also possible in 4.2, but it would remain
in string form until saving and reloading, which breaks our
`attr = save.reload.attr` contract. I think we should deprecate this in
5.0, and only allow array input from user sources. However, this
currently constitutes a breaking change to public API that did not go
through a deprecation cycle.
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Adding `# :nodoc:` to the parent `class` / `module` is not going
to ignore nested classes or modules.
There is a modifier `# :nodoc: all` but sadly the containing class
or module will continue to be in the docs.
/cc @sgrif
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Also takes a step towards supporting types which use a character other
than ',' for the delimiter (`box` is the only built in type for which
this is the case)
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The case where we have a column object, but don't have a type cast
method involves type casting the default value when changing the schema.
We get one of the column definition structs instead. That is a case that
I'm trying to remove overall, but in the short term, we can achieve the
same behavior without needing to pass the adapter to the array type by
creating a fake type that proxies to the adapter.
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We guarantee that `model.value` does not change after
`model.save && model.reload`. This requires type casting user input for
non-string types.
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As we promote these classes to first class concepts, these classes are
starting to gain enough behavior to warrant being moved into their own
files. Many of them will become quite large as we move additional
behavior to the type objects.
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