| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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previously dynamic finders only worked in combination with the actual
column name and not its alias defined with #alias_attribute
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This feature adds a lot of complication to ActiveRecord for dubious
value. Let's talk about what it does currently:
class Customer < ActiveRecord::Base
composed_of :balance, :class_name => "Money", :mapping => %w(balance amount)
end
Instead, you can do something like this:
def balance
@balance ||= Money.new(value, currency)
end
def balance=(balance)
self[:value] = balance.value
self[:currency] = balance.currency
@balance = balance
end
Since that's fairly easy code to write, and doesn't need anything
extra from the framework, if you use composed_of today, you'll
have to add accessors/mutators like that.
Closes #1436
Closes #2084
Closes #3807
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* Avoid double hash lookups in AR::Reflection when reflecting associations/aggregations
* Minor cleanups: use elsif, do..end, if..else instead of unless..else
* Simplify DynamicMatchers#respond_to?
* Use "where" instead of scoped with conditions hash
* Extract `scoped_by` method pattern regexp to constant
* Extract noisy class_eval from method_missing in dynamic matchers
* Extract readonly check, avoid calling column#to_s twice in persistence
* Refactor predicate builder, remove some variables
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Under Rails 3.1, you were allowed to pass a hash to a find_or_create
method with multiple attribute names, but this was broken as the
arguments were being improperly validated.
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