| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Since the attributes API is new in Rails 5, we don't actually need to keep
the behavior of `attribute :point`, as it's not a breaking change.
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This removes the following warning which has been out in the case of a PostgreSQL 9.3 below.
```
activerecord/test/cases/adapters/postgresql/geometric_test.rb:265: warning: instance variable @connection not initialized
```
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`adapters/postgresql/geometric_test.rb`
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This introduces a deprecation cycle to change the behavior of the
default point type in the PostgreSQL adapter. The old behavior will
continue to be available for the immediate future as `:legacy_point`.
The current behavior of returning an `Array` causes several problems,
the most significant of which is that we cannot differentiate between an
array of points, and a point itself in the case of a column with the
`point[]` type.
The attributes API gives us a reasonable way to have a proper
deprecation cycle for this change, so let's take advantage of it. If we
like this change, we can also add proper support for the other geometric
types (line, lseg, box, path, polygon, and circle), all of which are
just aliases for string today.
Fixes #20441
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Lowercase raw SQL has been replaced by 07b659c already. This commit
replaces everything else of raw SQL.
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This predicate is only used in `query_attribute`, and is relatively easy
to remove without adding a bunch of is a checks.
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onwards.
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Remaining are `limit`, `precision`, `scale`, and `type` (the symbol
version). These will remain on the column, since they mirror the options
to the `column` method in the schema definition DSL
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Slightly refactoring `PostgreSQLColumn`. `array` should be readonly.
`default_function` should be initialized by `super`. `sql_type` has been
removed `[]`. Since we already choose to remove it we should not change.
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This was only used for uniqueness validations. The first usage was in
conjunction with `limit`. Types which cast to string, but are not
considered text cannot have a limit. The second case was only with an
explicit `:case_sensitive => true` option given by the user.
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Don't type cast the default on the column
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If we want to have type decorators mess with the attribute, but not the
column, we need to stop type casting on the column. Where possible, we
changed the tests to test the value of `column_defaults`, which is
public API. `Column#default` is not.
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Revert "test pg, remove unused column assignments. Follow up to 254cdf47"
Related to #15492
This reverts commit 254cdf4728291277f3fbaa854f34495030e476b4.
This reverts commit 4bcf9029452e0c760af04faab6b549710401e8cf.
There are public methods that assume `Column#default` is type casted.
The return value of `Column#default` is publicly relevant and should not change.
/cc @sgrif
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That data is internal to Active Record. What we care about is that
new records have the right default value.
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/cc @sgrif
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