Rails 4 upgrading - attr_accessor - ruby-on-rails

I'm upgrading my application from rails 3.2 to rails 4.2.5.
In one of my model i have attr_accessor :user_id and i have defined a getter and setter methods, as i need to value on conditional basic.
class DummyModel < ActiveRecord::Base
attr_accessor :user_id
belongs_to :current_user
before_save :set_user_id
def user_id
self[:user_id] ? self[:user_id] : current_user_id ? current_user.id : nil
end
def user_id=(value)
self[:user_id] = value ? value : current_user_id ? current_user.id : nil
end
private
def set_user_id
self.current_user_id = CurrentUser.first_or_create(:user_id => self[:user_id]).id
end
end
In the above DummyModel, that table doesn't have user_id. But a referance current_user_id which needs to be update by the params user_id which i get from browser.
So when i do DummyModel.new(params[:dummy_model]), it will try to assign the params[:dummy_model][:user_id] to the attr_accessor (With the setter method = user_id=(value)). Once assigned it can be used in the before_save.
This whole thing was working properly in rails 3.2. But when i tried to update to rails 4.2, im getting this error message, as assigning value for attr_accessor with self[:user_id] syntax is removed.
ActiveModel::MissingAttributeError: can't write unknown attribute `user_id`
So i have one solution to rename the user_id to something else, but user_id is used is many places of my application its not possible to change.
Hope this explains my problem. Thanks for the help in advance.

I'm not sure why you're doing this but there's no point using attr_accessor if you're going to replace the methods it is generating. You may as well use the instance variable directly, for example
def user_id
#user_id || current_user_id
end
def user_id=(value)
#user_id = value || current_user_id
end

If you prefer attr_accessible, you could use it in Rails 4 too. You should install it like gem:
gem 'protected_attributes'
What i can understand from the above but in rails 4 now there are strong parameters. attr_accessor still can be initialized in rails 4 and that still gives you virtual attributes, but from above it looks like user_id is a physical attribute on the model level. Let me know if this makes sense.

I think you are confused about rails 3 attr_accessible and attr_accessor.
Link about difference between them: https://stackoverflow.com/a/6958433/1306709
In rails 4 you still can use attr_accessor, but if you meant attr_accessible here is some info: strong parameters

Related

Unable to initialize ActiveRecord object

I'm trying to do in a rails console
>> user = User.new(:name => "", :email => "test#example.com")
=> #<User not initialized>
My User class looks like
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
attr_accessor :name, :email
has_many :microposts
def initialize(attributes = {})
#name = attributes[:name]
#email = attributes[:email]
end
def formatted_email
"#{#name} <#{#email}>"
end
end
I am following along from the rails tutorial. Why am I not able to initialize the object ?
tl;dr: Copy exactly from the book and you should be fine. (Note: I am the author.)
The example in question is from Chapter 4 of the Ruby on Rails Tutorial book and is not an Active Record model. In particular, the User class shown in the question is based on Listing 4.9:
class User
attr_accessor :name, :email
def initialize(attributes = {})
#name = attributes[:name]
#email = attributes[:email]
end
def formatted_email
"#{#name} <#{#email}>"
end
end
This class does not inherit from ActiveRecord::Base, but rather must be included explicitly in the console using require './example_user.rb', as described in Section 4.4.5. The behavior you're seeing is the result of including < ActiveRecord::Base in the first line, but if you copy the code in Listing 4.9 exactly you should see the expected behavior.
are you running your console in the same file directory as your project? I'd also try switching up theĀ  notation to the example used in the book and see if that gets you anywhere.
you can also try calling User.new with no attributes and see if it generates an object as listed in 6.1.3 of the tutorial , and then fill in the attributes and see if it works.
also make sure you dont have a validation on your user name in your model.
and a last check you can run user.error to see why it might not be saving
First, I assume that User model persists in your Rails app. That means, that you already have a migrated User model before running rails console.
If that table doesn't exist, you will be instanly prompted with:
=> User(Table doesn't exist)
Now, let's have some fun in rails console:
First things first, don't override initialize method in Rails model; While creating an object initialize method from ActiveRecord takes precedence (I think), so it may create conflicts. Instead use after_initialize callback. In console:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
attr_accessible :name, :email
def after_initialize(attributes = {})
self[:name] = attributes[:name]
self[:email] = attributes[:email]
end
def formatted_email
"#{self.name} <#{self.email}>"
end
end
Now,
u = User.new({name: "Foo", email: "foo#bar.org"})
#<User name: "Foo", email: "foo#bar.org", created_at:nil updated_at: nil>
u.formatted_email
#=> "Foo <foo#bar.org>"
All done! Sweet.
UPDATE:
As per your recent gist; I see no point of having after_initialize at all. Rails does that on it's own.
First thing first, replace attr_accessor with attr_accessbile.
attr_accessor is ruby method(courtesy, metaprogramming) which creates getter and setter for provided instance variable. Rails uses attr_accessible for that; for security concerns, only instance variables allowed in attr_accessible allowed for mass-assignment (by sending params hash).
user.rb
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
attr_accessible :name, :email
#def after_initialize(attributes = {})
# self[:name] = attributes[:name]
# self[:email] = attributes[:email]
#end
def formatted_email
"#{self.name} <#{self.email}>"
end
end
Are you running console using the rails c command to load your environment from the root directory of your project? Typing irb to start a console session does not load the Rails application environment by itself.
Here are some more troubleshooting tips
Check to make sure that the development database specified in config/database.yml is running
Check to make sure a migration exists to create the Users table
Check to make sure the migrations have run with rake db:migrate
Check to make sure that a Users table actually does exist in the database, with columns of type varchar (or text) for fields :name and :email

Handling permalink user update when permalink is already taken Rails 3.2

I wanted some advice about how to handle to_param in regards to permalinks
Basically this is what happens.
Create a new company
The company :name is then parameterized and saved as a :permalink in the db
Updating an existing company enables you to change the :permalink
There are validations to ensure user updated :permalink is unique
The problem I'm having is occurring when updating the company's :permalink to something that already exists. The uniqueness validation works which is great, but it changes the params[:id] to the invalid permalink instead of reseting and using the existing params[:id]
When I try to edit the permalink to something else I get a flash validation error of "Name already taken" because it thinks I'm editing the company of the already existing :permalink (company). The URL reflects the change in permalink since my companies_controller.rb is using #company = Company.find_by_permalink[:id])
I wanted to know the best way to handle this issue?
class Companies < ActiveRecord::Base
before_create :set_permalink
before_update :update_permalink
attr_accessible :name, :permalink
validates :name, :permalink, uniqueness: { message: 'already taken' }
def to_param
permalink
end
private
def set_permalink_url
self.permalink = name.parameterize
end
def update_permalink_url
self.permalink = permalink.parameterize
end
end
Apologies if I'm not making too much sense.
Thanks in advance.
you could try to handle this with an after_rollback callback.
after_rollback :restore_permalink
def restore_permalink
self.permalink = permalink_was if permalink_changed?
end
here's how it works : every update / destroy in Rails is wrapped in a transaction. If the save fails, the transaction rollbacks and triggers the callback.
The callback then restores the old value (permalink_was) if it was changed since the record has been loaded.
See ActiveModel::Dirty and ActiveRecord::Transactions for more info.
EDIT
On the other hand, there may be another solution (untested) - just define your accessor like this :
def permalink=( value )
permalink_will_change! unless #permalink == value
#permalink = value
end
This way, the permalink will not be marked as dirty if the new value is identical to the old one, and so AR will not try to update the column.
Explanation:
i don't know on which version of rails it was implemented (it is relatively recent), but here's how "dirtyness" works :
your "standard" (automagically generated) attribute setters basicly call
#{your_attribute}_will_change! before setting the associated
instance variable (even if you set the exact same value than before)
when you call save, ActiveRecords looks for attributes that have changed ("dirty") and builds the SQL UPDATE query using ONLY these attributes (for performance reasons, mostly)
so if you want to avoid your permalink to appear in the query when it is unchanged, i think you have to override the standard setter - or avoid mass-assignment and only set permalink if it has changed

How to prevent updating a single attribute in Rails?

When a form is submitted, how to prevent a single attribute from being updated in Rails? All other attributes should be updated.
Is it before_save, attr_reader or some other way?
If using before_save, how to access to the attributes hash?
Rails 3.0.7
Check out attr_protected.
Class YourModel << ActiveRecord::Base
attr_protected :the_one_column, as: :update
# ...
end
Now as part of a call to update_attributes, you'd specify the :update role, for example
klass = YourModel.find(some_id)
klass.update_attributes(params[:your_model], as: :update)
If :the_one_column is set in params passed to update_attributes, it will throw an error.
As #Beerlington mentioned in his comment to your Question, you should also check out attr_accessible. It's generally better to spend the 30 minutes going through all models of your application white-listing attributes using attr_accessible than it is to blacklist specific attributes with attr_protected.
Other option is simply doing this in your controller:
klass.update_attributes( params[:your_model].except(:attributes_to_avoid) )

create_attribute before save in Rails 3.1 doesn't set self.attribute_id

Old code, working in Rails 3.0:
belongs_to :primary_stream
before_save :autocreate_primary_stream, :if=>lambda {|a| a.primary_stream.nil?}
def autocreate_primary_stream
self.create_primary_stream()
end
In Rails 3.1:
self.primary_stream is populated, and self.primary_stream_id is nil. When the record is saved, the primary_stream_id is saved as nil to the database.
I've had to do this, to get the behaviour I would expect:
belongs_to :primary_stream
before_save :autocreate_primary_stream, :if=>lambda {|a| a.primary_stream.nil?}
def autocreate_primary_stream
self.create_primary_stream()
self.primary_stream_id = primary_stream.id
end
Has something changed, or have I done something very silly?
It seems like there may be a bug in the way Rails handles association-creation in callbacks, introduced in 3.1. As far as I can tell, assigning a belongs-to association in before_save won't assign the foreign key to the owner model.
However, the autosaving-association stuff in 3.1 gives a cleaner way of achieving this -
belongs_to :primary_stream
before_validation :autocreate_primary_stream, :if=>lambda {|a| a.primary_stream.nil?}
def autocreate_primary_stream
self.build_primary_stream()
end
and the primary stream will be auto-saved along with the owner record.
https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/1594 was somewhat relevant.

Rails: How can I set default values in ActiveRecord?

How can I set default value in ActiveRecord?
I see a post from Pratik that describes an ugly, complicated chunk of code: http://m.onkey.org/2007/7/24/how-to-set-default-values-in-your-model
class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
def initialize_with_defaults(attrs = nil, &block)
initialize_without_defaults(attrs) do
setter = lambda { |key, value| self.send("#{key.to_s}=", value) unless
!attrs.nil? && attrs.keys.map(&:to_s).include?(key.to_s) }
setter.call('scheduler_type', 'hotseat')
yield self if block_given?
end
end
alias_method_chain :initialize, :defaults
end
I have seen the following examples googling around:
def initialize
super
self.status = ACTIVE unless self.status
end
and
def after_initialize
return unless new_record?
self.status = ACTIVE
end
I've also seen people put it in their migration, but I'd rather see it defined in the model code.
Is there a canonical way to set default value for fields in ActiveRecord model?
There are several issues with each of the available methods, but I believe that defining an after_initialize callback is the way to go for the following reasons:
default_scope will initialize values for new models, but then that will become the scope on which you find the model. If you just want to initialize some numbers to 0 then this is not what you want.
Defining defaults in your migration also works part of the time... As has already been mentioned this will not work when you just call Model.new.
Overriding initialize can work, but don't forget to call super!
Using a plugin like phusion's is getting a bit ridiculous. This is ruby, do we really need a plugin just to initialize some default values?
Overriding after_initialize is deprecated as of Rails 3. When I override after_initialize in rails 3.0.3 I get the following warning in the console:
DEPRECATION WARNING: Base#after_initialize has been deprecated, please use Base.after_initialize :method instead. (called from /Users/me/myapp/app/models/my_model:15)
Therefore I'd say write an after_initialize callback, which lets you default attributes in addition to letting you set defaults on associations like so:
class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :address
after_initialize :init
def init
self.number ||= 0.0 #will set the default value only if it's nil
self.address ||= build_address #let's you set a default association
end
end
Now you have just one place to look for initialization of your models. I'm using this method until someone comes up with a better one.
Caveats:
For boolean fields do:
self.bool_field = true if self.bool_field.nil?
See Paul Russell's comment on this answer for more details
If you're only selecting a subset of columns for a model (ie; using select in a query like Person.select(:firstname, :lastname).all) you will get a MissingAttributeError if your init method accesses a column that hasn't been included in the select clause. You can guard against this case like so:
self.number ||= 0.0 if self.has_attribute? :number
and for a boolean column...
self.bool_field = true if (self.has_attribute? :bool_value) && self.bool_field.nil?
Also note that the syntax is different prior to Rails 3.2 (see Cliff Darling's comment below)
Rails 5+
You can use the attribute method within your models, eg.:
class Account < ApplicationRecord
attribute :locale, :string, default: 'en'
end
You can also pass a lambda to the default parameter. Example:
attribute :uuid, :string, default: -> { SecureRandom.uuid }
The second argument is the type and it can also be a custom type class instance, for example:
attribute :uuid, UuidType.new, default: -> { SecureRandom.uuid }
We put the default values in the database through migrations (by specifying the :default option on each column definition) and let Active Record use these values to set the default for each attribute.
IMHO, this approach is aligned with the principles of AR : convention over configuration, DRY, the table definition drives the model, not the other way around.
Note that the defaults are still in the application (Ruby) code, though not in the model but in the migration(s).
Some simple cases can be handled by defining a default in the database schema but that doesn't handle a number of trickier cases including calculated values and keys of other models. For these cases I do this:
after_initialize :defaults
def defaults
unless persisted?
self.extras||={}
self.other_stuff||="This stuff"
self.assoc = [OtherModel.find_by_name('special')]
end
end
I've decided to use the after_initialize but I don't want it to be applied to objects that are found only those new or created. I think it is almost shocking that an after_new callback isn't provided for this obvious use case but I've made do by confirming whether the object is already persisted indicating that it isn't new.
Having seen Brad Murray's answer this is even cleaner if the condition is moved to callback request:
after_initialize :defaults, unless: :persisted?
# ":if => :new_record?" is equivalent in this context
def defaults
self.extras||={}
self.other_stuff||="This stuff"
self.assoc = [OtherModel.find_by_name('special')]
end
The after_initialize callback pattern can be improved by simply doing the following
after_initialize :some_method_goes_here, :if => :new_record?
This has a non-trivial benefit if your init code needs to deal with associations, as the following code triggers a subtle n+1 if you read the initial record without including the associated.
class Account
has_one :config
after_initialize :init_config
def init_config
self.config ||= build_config
end
end
The Phusion guys have some nice plugin for this.
An even better/cleaner potential way than the answers proposed is to overwrite the accessor, like this:
def status
self['status'] || ACTIVE
end
See "Overwriting default accessors" in the ActiveRecord::Base documentation and more from StackOverflow on using self.
I use the attribute-defaults gem
From the documentation:
run sudo gem install attribute-defaults and add require 'attribute_defaults' to your app.
class Foo < ActiveRecord::Base
attr_default :age, 18
attr_default :last_seen do
Time.now
end
end
Foo.new() # => age: 18, last_seen => "2014-10-17 09:44:27"
Foo.new(:age => 25) # => age: 25, last_seen => "2014-10-17 09:44:28"
Similar questions, but all have slightly different context:
- How do I create a default value for attributes in Rails activerecord's model?
Best Answer: Depends on What You Want!
If you want every object to start with a value: use after_initialize :init
You want the new.html form to have a default value upon opening the page? use https://stackoverflow.com/a/5127684/1536309
class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :address
after_initialize :init
def init
self.number ||= 0.0 #will set the default value only if it's nil
self.address ||= build_address #let's you set a default association
end
...
end
If you want every object to have a value calculated from user input: use before_save :default_values
You want user to enter X and then Y = X+'foo'? use:
class Task < ActiveRecord::Base
before_save :default_values
def default_values
self.status ||= 'P'
end
end
I've also seen people put it in their migration, but I'd rather see it
defined in the model code.
Is there a canonical way to set default value for fields in
ActiveRecord model?
The canonical Rails way, before Rails 5, was actually to set it in the migration, and just look in the db/schema.rb for whenever wanting to see what default values are being set by the DB for any model.
Contrary to what #Jeff Perrin answer states (which is a bit old), the migration approach will even apply the default when using Model.new, due to some Rails magic. Verified working in Rails 4.1.16.
The simplest thing is often the best. Less knowledge debt and potential points of confusion in the codebase. And it 'just works'.
class AddStatusToItem < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_column :items, :scheduler_type, :string, { null: false, default: "hotseat" }
end
end
Or, for column change without creating a new one, then do either:
class AddStatusToItem < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
change_column_default :items, :scheduler_type, "hotseat"
end
end
Or perhaps even better:
class AddStatusToItem < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
change_column :items, :scheduler_type, :string, default: "hotseat"
end
end
Check the official RoR guide for options in column change methods.
The null: false disallows NULL values in the DB, and, as an added benefit, it also updates so that all pre-existing DB records that were previously null is set with the default value for this field as well. You may exclude this parameter in the migration if you wish, but I found it very handy!
The canonical way in Rails 5+ is, as #Lucas Caton said:
class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
attribute :scheduler_type, :string, default: 'hotseat'
end
This is what constructors are for! Override the model's initialize method.
Use the after_initialize method.
Sup guys, I ended up doing the following:
def after_initialize
self.extras||={}
self.other_stuff||="This stuff"
end
Works like a charm!
Rails 6.1+
You can now use the attribute method on your model without setting a type.
attribute :status, default: ACTIVE
or
class Account < ApplicationRecord
attribute :locale, default: 'en'
end
Note that feeding a default to attribute cannot reference the instance of the class (a lambda will execute in the context of the class, not the instance). So, if you need to set the default to a value dynamically based on the instance or associations, you're still going to have to use an alternative, such as an after_initialize callback. As stated previously, it's recommended to limit this to new records only to avoid n+1 queries if you reference associations.
after_initialize :do_something_that_references_instance_or_associations, if: :new_record?
This has been answered for a long time, but I need default values frequently and prefer not to put them in the database. I create a DefaultValues concern:
module DefaultValues
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
class_methods do
def defaults(attr, to: nil, on: :initialize)
method_name = "set_default_#{attr}"
send "after_#{on}", method_name.to_sym
define_method(method_name) do
if send(attr)
send(attr)
else
value = to.is_a?(Proc) ? to.call : to
send("#{attr}=", value)
end
end
private method_name
end
end
end
And then use it in my models like so:
class Widget < ApplicationRecord
include DefaultValues
defaults :category, to: 'uncategorized'
defaults :token, to: -> { SecureRandom.uuid }
end
I ran into problems with after_initialize giving ActiveModel::MissingAttributeError errors when doing complex finds:
eg:
#bottles = Bottle.includes(:supplier, :substance).where(search).order("suppliers.name ASC").paginate(:page => page_no)
"search" in the .where is hash of conditions
So I ended up doing it by overriding initialize in this way:
def initialize
super
default_values
end
private
def default_values
self.date_received ||= Date.current
end
The super call is necessary to make sure the object initializing correctly from ActiveRecord::Base before doing my customize code, ie: default_values
after_initialize method is deprecated, use the callback instead.
after_initialize :defaults
def defaults
self.extras||={}
self.other_stuff||="This stuff"
end
however, using :default in your migrations is still the cleanest way.
The problem with the after_initialize solutions is that you have to add an after_initialize to every single object you look up out of the DB, regardless of whether you access this attribute or not. I suggest a lazy-loaded approach.
The attribute methods (getters) are of course methods themselves, so you can override them and provide a default. Something like:
Class Foo < ActiveRecord::Base
# has a DB column/field atttribute called 'status'
def status
(val = read_attribute(:status)).nil? ? 'ACTIVE' : val
end
end
Unless, like someone pointed out, you need to do Foo.find_by_status('ACTIVE'). In that case I think you'd really need to set the default in your database constraints, if the DB supports it.
class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
def status
self[:status] or ACTIVE
end
before_save{ self.status ||= ACTIVE }
end
I strongly suggest using the "default_value_for" gem: https://github.com/FooBarWidget/default_value_for
There are some tricky scenarios that pretty much require overriding the initialize method, which that gem does.
Examples:
Your db default is NULL, your model/ruby-defined default is "some string", but you actually want to set the value to nil for whatever reason: MyModel.new(my_attr: nil)
Most solutions here will fail to set the value to nil, and will instead set it to the default.
OK, so instead of taking the ||= approach, you switch to my_attr_changed?...
BUT now imagine your db default is "some string", your model/ruby-defined default is "some other string", but under a certain scenario, you want to set the value to "some string" (the db default): MyModel.new(my_attr: 'some_string')
This will result in my_attr_changed? being false because the value matches the db default, which in turn will fire your ruby-defined default code and set the value to "some other string" -- again, not what you desired.
For those reasons I don't think this can properly be accomplished with just an after_initialize hook.
Again, I think the "default_value_for" gem is taking the right approach: https://github.com/FooBarWidget/default_value_for
Although doing that for setting default values is confusing and awkward in most cases, you can use :default_scope as well. Check out squil's comment here.
I've found that using a validation method provides a lot of control over setting defaults. You can even set defaults (or fail validation) for updates. You even set a different default value for inserts vs updates if you really wanted to.
Note that the default won't be set until #valid? is called.
class MyModel
validate :init_defaults
private
def init_defaults
if new_record?
self.some_int ||= 1
elsif some_int.nil?
errors.add(:some_int, "can't be blank on update")
end
end
end
Regarding defining an after_initialize method, there could be performance issues because after_initialize is also called by each object returned by :find :
http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_validations_callbacks.html#after_initialize-and-after_find
If the column happens to be a 'status' type column, and your model lends itself to the use of state machines, consider using the aasm gem, after which you can simply do
aasm column: "status" do
state :available, initial: true
state :used
# transitions
end
It still doesn't initialize the value for unsaved records, but it's a bit cleaner than rolling your own with init or whatever, and you reap the other benefits of aasm such as scopes for all your statuses.
https://github.com/keithrowell/rails_default_value
class Task < ActiveRecord::Base
default :status => 'active'
end
Here's a solution I've used that I was a little surprised hasn't been added yet.
There are two parts to it. First part is setting the default in the actual migration, and the second part is adding a validation in the model ensuring that the presence is true.
add_column :teams, :new_team_signature, :string, default: 'Welcome to the Team'
So you'll see here that the default is already set. Now in the validation you want to ensure that there is always a value for the string, so just do
validates :new_team_signature, presence: true
What this will do is set the default value for you. (for me I have "Welcome to the Team"), and then it will go one step further an ensure that there always is a value present for that object.
Hope that helps!
# db/schema.rb
create_table :store_listings, force: true do |t|
t.string :my_string, default: "original default"
end
StoreListing.new.my_string # => "original default"
# app/models/store_listing.rb
class StoreListing < ActiveRecord::Base
attribute :my_string, :string, default: "new default"
end
StoreListing.new.my_string # => "new default"
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
attribute :my_default_proc, :datetime, default: -> { Time.now }
end
Product.new.my_default_proc # => 2015-05-30 11:04:48 -0600
sleep 1
Product.new.my_default_proc # => 2015-05-30 11:04:49 -0600
I had a similar challenge when working on a Rails 6 application.
Here's how I solved it:
I have a Users table and a Roles table. The Users table belongs to the Roles table. I also have an Admin and Student Models that inherit from the Users table.
It then required that I set a default value for the role whenever a user is created, say admin role that has an id = 1 or student role that has an id = 2.
class User::Admin < User
before_save :default_values
def default_values
# set role_id to '1' except if role_id is not empty
return self.role_id = '1' unless role_id.nil?
end
end
This means that before an admin user is created/saved in the database the role_id is set to a default of 1 if it is not empty.
return self.role_id = '1' unless role_id.nil?
is the same as:
return self.role_id = '1' unless self.role_id.nil?
and the same as:
self.role_id = '1' if role_id.nil?
but the first one is cleaner and more precise.
That's all.
I hope this helps
Been using this for a while.
# post.rb
class Post < ApplicationRecord
attribute :country, :string, default: 'ID'
end
use default_scope in rails 3
api doc
ActiveRecord obscures the difference between defaulting defined in the database (schema) and defaulting done in the application (model). During initialization, it parses the database schema and notes any default values specified there. Later, when creating objects, it assigns those schema-specified default values without touching the database.
discussion
From the api docs http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Callbacks.html
Use the before_validation method in your model, it gives you the options of creating specific initialisation for create and update calls
e.g. in this example (again code taken from the api docs example) the number field is initialised for a credit card. You can easily adapt this to set whatever values you want
class CreditCard < ActiveRecord::Base
# Strip everything but digits, so the user can specify "555 234 34" or
# "5552-3434" or both will mean "55523434"
before_validation(:on => :create) do
self.number = number.gsub(%r[^0-9]/, "") if attribute_present?("number")
end
end
class Subscription < ActiveRecord::Base
before_create :record_signup
private
def record_signup
self.signed_up_on = Date.today
end
end
class Firm < ActiveRecord::Base
# Destroys the associated clients and people when the firm is destroyed
before_destroy { |record| Person.destroy_all "firm_id = #{record.id}" }
before_destroy { |record| Client.destroy_all "client_of = #{record.id}" }
end
Surprised that his has not been suggested here

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