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Add `ActiveSupport::Testing::TimeHelpers#travel` and `#travel_to`. These
methods change current time to the given time or time difference by
stubbing `Time.now` and `Date.today` to return the time or date after
the difference calculation, or the time or date that got passed into the
method respectively. These methods also accept a block, which will
return current time back to its original state at the end of the block.
Example for `#travel`:
Time.now # => 2013-11-09 15:34:49 -05:00
travel 1.day
Time.now # => 2013-11-10 15:34:49 -05:00
Date.today # => Sun, 10 Nov 2013
Example for `#travel_to`:
Time.now # => 2013-11-09 15:34:49 -05:00
travel_to Time.new(2004, 11, 24, 01, 04, 44)
Time.now # => 2004-11-24 01:04:44 -05:00
Date.today # => Wed, 24 Nov 2004
Both of these methods also accept a block, which will return the current
time back to its original state at the end of the block:
Time.now # => 2013-11-09 15:34:49 -05:00
travel 1.day do
User.create.created_at # => Sun, 10 Nov 2013 15:34:49 EST -05:00
end
travel_to Time.new(2004, 11, 24, 01, 04, 44) do
User.create.created_at # => Wed, 24 Nov 2004 01:04:44 EST -05:00
end
Time.now # => 2013-11-09 15:34:49 -05:00
This module is included in `ActiveSupport::TestCase` automatically.
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Example:
class A
cattr_reader(:defr) { 'default_reader_value' }
end
A.defr # => 'default_reader_value'
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Previously, calling `::JSON.{generate,dump}` sometimes causes
unexpected failures such as intridea/multi_json#86.
`::JSON.{generate,dump}` now bypasses the ActiveSupport JSON encoder
completely and yields the same result with or without ActiveSupport.
This means that it will **not** call `as_json` and will ignore any
options that the JSON gem does not natively understand. To invoke
ActiveSupport's JSON encoder instead, use `obj.to_json(options)` or
`ActiveSupport::JSON.encode(obj, options)`.
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Use rescue with a splat rather and catching all exceptions and manually filtering in Kernel#suppress
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updated documentation for Integer [ci skip]
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methods and outputs indented [ci skip]
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Speed up Array#split when block is passed
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Ruby 2.0.0p247
Rehearsal ---------------------------------------
old 10.670000 0.150000 10.820000 ( 10.822651)
new 8.520000 0.050000 8.570000 ( 8.571825)
----------------------------- total: 19.390000sec
user system total real
old 10.620000 0.170000 10.790000 ( 10.790409)
new 8.570000 0.110000 8.680000 ( 8.686051)
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Array#in_groups: documentation updated [ci skip]
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Array#split preserving the calling array
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Fix AS::TimeWithZone#as_json docs [ci skip]
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According to 28ab79d7c579fa1d76ac868be02b38b02818428a
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In #12203, the JSON core extensions were moved into the `core_ext`
folder. Unfortunately, there are some corresponding requires that
were left behind. The problem is partially addressed in #12710, this
commit fixes the rest.
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See [1] for why this is not a good idea.
As part of this refactor, circular reference protection in as_json has
been removed and the corresponding error class has been deprecated.
As discussed with @jeremy, circular reference error is considered
programmer errors and protecting against it is out of scope for
the encoder.
This is again based on the excellent work by @sergiocampama in #11728.
[1]: https://github.com/intridea/multi_json/pull/138#issuecomment-24468223
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This saved about 46 array allocations per request on an extremely simple
application. The delegation happened in the notification subsystem
which is a hotspot, so this should result in even more savings with
larger apps.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 41eef0d1479526f7de25fd4391d98e61c126d9f5
Author: Aaron Patterson <aaron.patterson@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Nov 6 16:32:31 2013 -0800
speed up notifications
commit 586b4a18656f66fb2c518fb8e8fee66a016e8ae6
Author: Aaron Patterson <aaron.patterson@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Nov 6 16:31:05 2013 -0800
speed up runtime registry methods
commit b67d074cb4314df9a88438f785868cef77e583d7
Author: Aaron Patterson <aaron.patterson@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Nov 6 16:28:12 2013 -0800
change method name and make it public
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So strings can be humanized without being capitalized:
'employee_salary'.humanize # => "Employee salary"
'employee_salary'.humanize(capitalize: false) # => "employee salary"
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JSON.{dump,generate} offered by the JSON gem is not compatiable with
Rails at the moment and can cause a lot of subtle bugs when passed
certain data structures. This changed all direct usage of the JSON gem
in internal Rails code to always go through AS::JSON.{decode,encode}.
We also shouldn't be implementing `to_json` most of the time, and
these occurances are replaced with an equivilent `as_json`
implementation to avoid problems down the road.
See [1] for all the juicy details.
[1]: intridea/multi_json#138 (comment)
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These methods now takes the same options as Hash#as_json, for example:
struct = Struct.new(:foo, :bar).new
struct.foo = "hello"
struct.bar = "world"
json = struct.as_json(only: [:foo]) # => {foo: "hello"}
This is extracted from PR #11728 from @sergiocampama, see also the
discussion in #11460.
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them to JavaScript functions like getTime().
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Same as 4d4ff531b8807ee88a3fc46875c7e76f613956fb
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Add Rdoc document for Array#forty_two [ci skip]
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Same as #12710 but for the time module this time. This time it should
fix the Active Model test suite in isolation avoiding a TypeError to
be raised about the superclass of the DateTime object.
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If we try to monkey-patch the class before requiring it, then a
"superclass mismatch" (TypeError) error is raised and the build can't
run correctly.
Fixes #12708
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Rails 4.1 has switched away from MultiJson, and does not currently
support any options on `ActiveSupport::JSON.decode`. Passing in
unsupported options (i.e. any non-empty options hash) will now raise
an ArgumentError.
Rationale:
1. We cannot guarantee the underlying JSON parser won't change in the
future, hence we cannot guarantee a consistent set of options the
method could take
2. The `json` gem, which happens to be the current JSON parser, takes
many dangerous options that is irrelevant to the purpose of AS's
JSON decoding API
3. To reserve the options hash for future use, e.g. overriding default
global options like ActiveSupport.parse_json_times
This change *DOES NOT* introduce any changes in the public API. The
signature of the method is still decode(json_text, options). The
difference is this method previously accepted undocumented options
which does different things when the underlying adapter changes. It
now correctly raises an ArgumentError when it encounters options that
it does not recognize (and currently it does not support any options).
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Eagerload active_support/json/encoding in active_support/core_ext/object/to_json
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TL;DR The primary driver is to remove autoload surprise.
This is related to #12106. (The root cause for that ticket is that
json/add defines Regexp#to_json among others, but here I'll reproduce
the problem without json/add.)
Before:
>> require 'active_support/core_ext/to_json'
=> true
>> //.as_json
NoMethodError: undefined method `as_json' for //:Regexp
from (irb):3
from /Users/godfrey/.rvm/rubies/ruby-2.0.0-p195/bin/irb:16:in `<main>'
>> //.to_json
=> "\"(?-mix:)\""
>> //.as_json
=> "(?-mix:)"
After:
>> require 'active_support/core_ext/to_json'
=> true
>> //.as_json
=> "(?-mix:)"
This is because ActiveSupport::JSON is autoloaded the first time
Object#to_json is called, which causes additional core extentions
(previously defined in active_support/json/encoding.rb) to be loaded.
When someone require 'active_support/core_ext', the expectation is
that it would add certain methods to the core classes NOW. The
previous behaviour causes additional methods to be loaded the first
time you call `to_json`, which could cause nasty surprises and other
unplesant side-effects.
This change moves all core extensions in to core_ext/json. AS::JSON is
still autoloaded on first #to_json call, but since it nolonger
include the core extensions, it should address the aforementioned bug.
*Requiring core_ext/object/to_json now causes a deprecation warnning*
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support :unless_exist for FileCache
Conflicts:
activesupport/CHANGELOG.md
activesupport/test/caching_test.rb
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Minor Refactoring to `NumberHelper#number_to_human`
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