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require 'set'
module ActiveRecord
# :stopdoc:
module ConnectionAdapters
# An abstract definition of a column in a table.
class Column
TRUE_VALUES = [true, 1, '1', 't', 'T', 'true', 'TRUE', 'on', 'ON'].to_set
FALSE_VALUES = [false, 0, '0', 'f', 'F', 'false', 'FALSE', 'off', 'OFF'].to_set
module Format
ISO_DATE = /\A(\d{4})-(\d\d)-(\d\d)\z/
ISO_DATETIME = /\A(\d{4})-(\d\d)-(\d\d) (\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)(\.\d+)?\z/
end
attr_reader :name, :default, :cast_type, :null, :sql_type, :default_function
delegate :type, :precision, :scale, :limit, :klass, :text?, :number?, :binary?,
:type_cast, :type_cast_for_write, :type_cast_for_database, to: :cast_type
# Instantiates a new column in the table.
#
# +name+ is the column's name, such as <tt>supplier_id</tt> in <tt>supplier_id int(11)</tt>.
# +default+ is the type-casted default value, such as +new+ in <tt>sales_stage varchar(20) default 'new'</tt>.
# +cast_type+ is the object used for type casting and type information.
# +sql_type+ is used to extract the column's length, if necessary. For example +60+ in
# <tt>company_name varchar(60)</tt>.
# It will be mapped to one of the standard Rails SQL types in the <tt>type</tt> attribute.
# +null+ determines if this column allows +NULL+ values.
def initialize(name, default, cast_type, sql_type = nil, null = true)
@name = name
@cast_type = cast_type
@sql_type = sql_type
@null = null
@default = extract_default(default)
@default_function = nil
end
def has_default?
!default.nil?
end
# Returns the human name of the column name.
#
# ===== Examples
# Column.new('sales_stage', ...).human_name # => 'Sales stage'
def human_name
Base.human_attribute_name(@name)
end
def extract_default(default)
type_cast(default)
end
end
end
# :startdoc:
end
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