| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This fixes issue #3217.
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Method compilation provides better performance and I think the code
comes out cleaner as well.
A knock on effect is that methods that get redefined produce warnings. I
think this is a good thing. I had to deal with a bunch of warnings
coming from our tests, though.
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Well, not all of them, but some of them.
I don't think there's much reason for these methods to be private.
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We don't need the complexity of to_sentence, and it shouldn't be a bang
method.
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It's not really a good idea to have this as a global config option. We
should allow people to specify the behaviour per association.
There will now be two new values:
* :dependent => :restrict_with_exception implements the current
behaviour of :restrict. :restrict itself is deprecated in favour of
:restrict_with_exception.
* :dependent => :restrict_with_error implements the new behaviour - it
adds an error to the owner if there are dependent records present
See #4727 for the original discussion of this.
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Fix #7191. Remove unnecessary transaction when assigning has_one associations.
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Didn't fail the test because adapter#query happens to
not call raw connection's #query, but don't want to count
on that and have a fragile test.
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Full test requiring manual intervention was fine, but
w/ simulated disconnect, assertion was backward & still
passing. Was several kinds of wrong.
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Make sure :environment task is executed before db:schema:load or
db:structure:load
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db:structure:load
Otherwise, if schema_format = :sql, you will see:
$ rake db:setup --trace
** Invoke db:setup (first_time)
** Invoke db:schema:load_if_ruby (first_time)
** Invoke db:create (first_time)
** Invoke db:load_config (first_time)
** Invoke rails_env (first_time)
** Execute rails_env
** Execute db:load_config
** Execute db:create
db_example_development already exists
db_example_test already exists
** Execute db:schema:load_if_ruby #<-------- :environment hasn't been executed yet
** Invoke db:schema:load (first_time)
** Invoke environment (first_time)
** Execute environment
** Execute db:schema:load
~/db_example/db/schema.rb doesn't exist yet. Run `rake db:migrate` to create it then try again.
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by Active Support)
Selecting which key extensions to include in active_support/rails
made apparent the systematic usage of Object#in? in the code base.
After some discussion in
https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/5ea6b0df9a36d033f21b52049426257a4637028d
we decided to remove it and use plain Ruby, which seems enough
for this particular idiom.
In this commit the refactor has been made case by case. Sometimes
include? is the natural alternative, others a simple || is the
way you actually spell the condition in your head, others a case
statement seems more appropriate. I have chosen the one I liked
the most in each case.
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COUNT(*) queries can be slow in PostgreSQL, #exists? avoids this by
selecting a single record.
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Conflicts:
activemodel/lib/active_model/secure_password.rb
activerecord/lib/active_record/associations/collection_proxy.rb
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This reverts commit 3fb0100ef893b8cf229e82ce264b426e0c961eb1.
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This reverts commit c34c1916d1d6cd6ba219aa39eb97fa2e77c4c61f.
Reason: composed_of was added from now to discuss better
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It was previously removed from the code, so we shouldn't mention
it in the docs
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A Boolean field will accept true or false as defaults instead of 0 / 1.
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Closes #6600
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Some are loaded from Base which is loaded when a model inherits from it
and some others are used in rake tasks
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On reflection, it seems like a bit of a weird method to have on
ActiveRecord::Base, and it shouldn't be needed most of the time anyway.
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This was requested by DHH to allow creating of one's own custom
association macros.
For example:
module Commentable
def has_many_comments(extra)
has_many :comments, -> { where(:foo).merge(extra) }
end
end
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
extend Commentable
has_many_comments -> { where(:bar) }
end
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This is a private place to put those AS features that are used
by every component. Nowadays we cherry-pick individual files
wherever they are used, but that it is not worth the effort
for stuff that is going to be loaded for sure sooner or later,
like blank?, autoload, concern, etc.
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zero and the new value is not a string.
Before this commit this was the behavior
r = Review.find_by_issue(0)
r.issue
=> 0
r.changes
=> {}
r.issue = 0
=> 0
r.changed?
=> true
r.changes
=> {"issue"=>[0,0]}
Fixes #7237
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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This can be used to get a Relation from an association.
Previously we had a #scoped method, but we're deprecating that for
AR::Base, so it doesn't make sense to have it here.
This was requested by DHH, to facilitate code like this:
Project.scope.order('created_at DESC').page(current_page).tagged_with(@tag).limit(5).scoping do
@topics = @project.topics.scope
@todolists = @project.todolists.scope
@attachments = @project.attachments.scope
@documents = @project.documents.scope
end
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This makes it easier to see what the documentation refers to.
It also means that we are not doing unnecessary work for delegations
that have no args / splats / block / etc.
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This doesn't change the exernal behavior, but it moves some code around
to where I think it properly belongs.
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This method explicitly loads the records and then returns `self`.
Rather than deciding between "do I want an array or a relation?",
most people are actually asking themselves "do I want to eager load
or lazy load?" Therefore, this method provides a way to explicitly
eager-load without having to switch from a `Relation` to an array.
Example:
@posts = Post.where(published: true).load
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