From 1fb48e4d9908a17664470ed56919d9f87fa3dfe8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "T.J. Schuck" Date: Fri, 26 May 2017 18:12:26 -0400 Subject: Doc updates for ActiveRecord::Batches [ci skip] --- activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/batches.rb | 24 +++++++++++----------- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) (limited to 'activerecord/lib/active_record') diff --git a/activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/batches.rb b/activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/batches.rb index 76031515fd..13a2c3f511 100644 --- a/activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/batches.rb +++ b/activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/batches.rb @@ -30,14 +30,14 @@ module ActiveRecord # end # # ==== Options - # * :batch_size - Specifies the size of the batch. Default to 1000. + # * :batch_size - Specifies the size of the batch. Defaults to 1000. # * :start - Specifies the primary key value to start from, inclusive of the value. # * :finish - Specifies the primary key value to end at, inclusive of the value. # * :error_on_ignore - Overrides the application config to specify if an error should be raised when - # an order is present in the relation. + # an order is present in the relation. # # Limits are honored, and if present there is no requirement for the batch - # size, it can be less than, equal, or greater than the limit. + # size: it can be less than, equal to, or greater than the limit. # # The options +start+ and +finish+ are especially useful if you want # multiple workers dealing with the same processing queue. You can make @@ -89,14 +89,14 @@ module ActiveRecord # To be yielded each record one by one, use #find_each instead. # # ==== Options - # * :batch_size - Specifies the size of the batch. Default to 1000. + # * :batch_size - Specifies the size of the batch. Defaults to 1000. # * :start - Specifies the primary key value to start from, inclusive of the value. # * :finish - Specifies the primary key value to end at, inclusive of the value. # * :error_on_ignore - Overrides the application config to specify if an error should be raised when - # an order is present in the relation. + # an order is present in the relation. # # Limits are honored, and if present there is no requirement for the batch - # size, it can be less than, equal, or greater than the limit. + # size: it can be less than, equal to, or greater than the limit. # # The options +start+ and +finish+ are especially useful if you want # multiple workers dealing with the same processing queue. You can make @@ -140,9 +140,9 @@ module ActiveRecord # If you do not provide a block to #in_batches, it will return a # BatchEnumerator which is enumerable. # - # Person.in_batches.with_index do |relation, batch_index| + # Person.in_batches.each_with_index do |relation, batch_index| # puts "Processing relation ##{batch_index}" - # relation.each { |relation| relation.delete_all } + # relation.delete_all # end # # Examples of calling methods on the returned BatchEnumerator object: @@ -152,12 +152,12 @@ module ActiveRecord # Person.in_batches.each_record(&:party_all_night!) # # ==== Options - # * :of - Specifies the size of the batch. Default to 1000. - # * :load - Specifies if the relation should be loaded. Default to false. + # * :of - Specifies the size of the batch. Defaults to 1000. + # * :load - Specifies if the relation should be loaded. Defaults to false. # * :start - Specifies the primary key value to start from, inclusive of the value. # * :finish - Specifies the primary key value to end at, inclusive of the value. # * :error_on_ignore - Overrides the application config to specify if an error should be raised when - # an order is present in the relation. + # an order is present in the relation. # # Limits are honored, and if present there is no requirement for the batch # size, it can be less than, equal, or greater than the limit. @@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ module ActiveRecord # # NOTE: It's not possible to set the order. That is automatically set to # ascending on the primary key ("id ASC") to make the batch ordering - # consistent. Therefore the primary key must be orderable, e.g an integer + # consistent. Therefore the primary key must be orderable, e.g. an integer # or a string. # # NOTE: By its nature, batch processing is subject to race conditions if -- cgit v1.2.3