From 3202fbabe6df3591d7e2c35727ea9c8b68df8828 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sam Stephenson Date: Sun, 18 Mar 2007 07:05:58 +0000 Subject: Refactor ActiveSupport::JSON to be less obtuse. Add support for JSON decoding by way of Syck with ActiveSupport::JSON.decode(json_string). Prevent hash keys that are JavaScript reserved words from being unquoted during encoding. git-svn-id: http://svn-commit.rubyonrails.org/rails/trunk@6443 5ecf4fe2-1ee6-0310-87b1-e25e094e27de --- activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/misc.rb | 11 +---------- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 10 deletions(-) (limited to 'activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/misc.rb') diff --git a/activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/misc.rb b/activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/misc.rb index d82bb929a2..ea893c54b8 100644 --- a/activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/misc.rb +++ b/activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/misc.rb @@ -43,21 +43,12 @@ class Object yield ActiveSupport::OptionMerger.new(self, options) end - # Dumps object in JSON (JavaScript Object Notation). See www.json.org for more info. - # - # Account.find(1).to_json - # => "{attributes: {username: \"foo\", id: \"1\", password: \"bar\"}}" - # - def to_json - ActiveSupport::JSON.encode(self) - end - # A duck-type assistant method. For example, ActiveSupport extends Date # to define an acts_like_date? method, and extends Time to define # acts_like_time?. As a result, we can do "x.acts_like?(:time)" and # "x.acts_like?(:date)" to do duck-type-safe comparisons, since classes that # we want to act like Time simply need to define an acts_like_time? method. def acts_like?(duck) - respond_to? :"acts_like_#{duck}?" + respond_to? "acts_like_#{duck}?" end end \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3