virtual attribute with dates - ruby-on-rails

I have a form which i'd like to simplify. I'm recording a startdate and an enddate, but would like to show the user only a startdate and then a drop down with number of days.
But I'm having problems with my model and storing it correctly.
The first part works.
def date=(thedate)
#puts the startdate in the correct format...
self.startdate = Date.strptime(thedate, '%m/%d/%Y')
end
The problem I have has to do with the fact that the end date is based on the startdate + the no_days which is itself a virtual attribute. I tried doing the second part as a after_validation callback but it doesn't seem to work.
def set_dates
if self.startdate
self.enddate = self.startdate + days
end
end

First of all, why do you need to convert a date attribute in your startdate? Why don't you use something like f.date_select :startdate in you form?
Then, in your model you need something like attr_accessor :number_of_days with wich you can get the number_of_days as an integer in your form with f.select :number_of_days, (1..10).to_a (set the array as you like).
You can set your callback the following way:
after_validation :set_enddate
def set_enddate
if self.startdate
self.enddate = self.startdate + self.number_of_days.days
end
end

Related

Passing from a Controller to a Model

Pretty new to RoR. Wonder if anyone can help me with this issue.
I got a gem called "business_time" which calculates the business days between two dates. I have set up a method in the model which does all the calculations.
I have a field called "credit" which should hold the number of business days. Here's what I have:
MODEL
def self.calculate(from_date,to_date)
days = 0
date_1 = Date.parse(from_date)
date 2 = Date.parse(to_date)
days = date_1.business_days_until(date2)
days
end
CONTROLLER
def new
#vacation = current_user.vacations.build
#vacations = Vacation.calculate(:from_date, :to_date)
end
I got an error referencing something about a string.
Furthermore, how do I go about storing the data from the method into the field called "credit"?
Thanks guys.
I think there is no need for an extra method, since all attributes (from_date, end_date and credit) are stored in the same model.
I would just set from_date and end_date in the initializer and calculate credit with a callback before validation:
# in the model
before_validation :calculate_credit
private
def calculate_credit
if from_date && to_date
# `+ 1` because the user takes off both days (`from_date` and `to_date`),
# but `business_days_until` doesn't count the `from_day`.
self.credit = from_date.business_days_until(to_date) + 1
end
end
# in the controller
def new
#vacation = current_user.vacations.build
end
def create
#vacation = current_user.vacations.build(vacation_params)
if #vacation.save
# #vacation.credit would return the calculated credit at this point
else
# ...
end
end
private
def vacation_params
params.require(:vacation).permit(:from_date, :to_date)
end
What you need here is pass String objects instead of Symbol objects.
So instead of #vacations = Vacation.calculate(:from_date, :to_date), you probably need to pass params[:from_date] and params[:to_date] which should be strings like 20/01/2016, etc...
Your code should be
#vacations = Vacation.calculate(params[:from_date], params[:to_date])

Providing defaults if params aren't present

I'm trying to create a function that will return defaults if date parameters are not set.
If params[:start_time] not present? return DateTime.now and if params[:end_time] not present? return 1.week.from_now
I'd like to keep these two checks in one function but I can't get it working. If there a better way?
# Main search function
def self.search params, location
self
.join.not_booked
.close_to(Venue.close_to(location))
.activity(Activity.get_ids params[:activity])
.start_date(valid_date params[:start_time])
.endg_date(valid_date params[:end_time])
.ordered
end
# Check if date is nil
def self.valid_date date
if date
date.to_datetime
elsif date == params[:start_time]
DateTime.now
elsif date == params[:end_time]
1.week.from_now
end
end
Asked another way:
What's the best way to combine these two functions?
# Check if date is nil
def self.check_start date
date.present? ? date.to_datetime : DateTime.now
end
def self.check_end date
date.present? ? date.to_datetime : 1.week.from_now
end
If it's not a hard requirement to combine those two methods, you can simply and easily have these two different methods for checking the validity of start_time and end_time:
def self.validate_start_date start_date
start_date.present? ? start_date.to_datetime : DateTime.now
end
def self.validate_end_date end_date
end_date.present? ? end_date.to_datetime : 1.week.from_now
end
Then, in your main search function use them accordingly (start_date(validate_start_date params[:start_time]) and end_date(validate_end_date params[:end_time])):
# Main search function
def self.search params, location
self
.join.not_booked
.close_to(Venue.close_to(location))
.activity(Activity.get_ids params[:activity])
.start_date(validate_start_date params[:start_time])
.end_date(validate_end_date params[:end_time])
.ordered
end
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding but why not:
def self.check param
result = 1.week.from_now
if param[:end_time].present?
result = param[:end_time].to_datetime
end
return result
end
Your second "end_time" check will always overwrite any possible result from your "start_time" if we put it into one function.

Set expiration date and time with before_create Rails 4

I am adding expire function to advertisement. Expire should contain data and time Like this: 12.06.12 14:24
At this point I done like this:
I have additional column in database for advertisements called expiration
before_create :set_expiration_date
def set_expiration_date
self.expiration = Date.today + 56.days
end
This works great. Now in view I want to see this expiration date.
Advertisement#show
<%= #advertisement.expiration.to_formatted_s(:db) %>
but it gives me just this 2015-02-06
When I changed set_expiration_date to:
def set_expiration_date
self.expiration = Time.now + 56.days
end
That still was like 2015-02-06 without time.
So I wonder if only soulution would be having two columns expiration_date and expiration_time to my advertisement table.
Then having like this in my model:
before_create :set_expiration_date
before_create :set_expiration_time
def set_expiration_date
self.expiration_date = Date.today + 56.days
end
def set_expiration_time
self.expiration_time = Time.now
end
I think this solution is very ugly.
Is there any other simpier solution to my problem ? How can I store in single column date and time?
Thanks in advance!
Change the datatype of expiration from date to datetime.
Change expiration from date to datetime, and why do you don't use strftime to beter format your output
example:
<%= #advertisement.expiration.strftime("%b %d %Y, %H:%M") %>
See also strftime format meaning

ActiveRecord where method datetime passed

Thanks for your continuing support in my latest venture in a Rails app. It's been a while since I've made something in Rails so here is my latest question. I appreciate the help you've all given in the past.
I have a Model called Event.rb which contains a date:date and time:time fields for the Event.
I also have a method inside of the model which is..
def begins
DateTime.new(date.year, date.month, date.day, time.hour, time.min, time.sec)
end
As I can't see if something has truly passed because I only have Date and Time separate so I need them together.
My question is...
I want to be able to add in the DateTime :begins into the following other method in my Model...
def self.past
where("date <= ?", TIME_NOW)
end
Just like I have a method which is...
def upcoming?
self.date >= Time.now
end
Which I could easily change self.date to begins and would past I would imagine?
Thanks!
Perhaps something like this will work for querying the database for past events using your existing date and time columns:
scope :past, lambda {
where("date <= ? and time <= ?",
Time.now.strftime("%Y-%d-%m"),
Time.now.strftime("%H:%M:%S")
)
}
past_events = Event.past
For checking the current instance, you could continue to use your begins method:
def past?
begins < DateTime.now
end
#event = Event.first
#event.past?

Rails: controller won't update model correctly

I apologize in advance, this is going to be a long question.
Short version:
I have a Meeting model that has a date, start_time, and end_time. These are time objects, which of course are a pain for users to input, so I'm using virtual attributes to accept strings which are parsed by Chronic before save.
I have a plain vanilla rails controller that receives these virtual attributes from the form and passes them along to the model. Here is the controller:
def create
#meeting = #member.meetings.build(params[:meeting])
if #meeting.save
redirect_to member_meetings_path(#member), :notice => "Meeting Added"
else
render :new
end
end
def update
#meeting = #member.meetings.find(params[:id])
if #meeting.update_attributes(params[:meeting])
redirect_to member_meetings_path(#member), :notice => "Meeting Updated"
else
render :new
end
end
I've verified that the controller receives the correct parameters from the form, for instance params[:meeting][:date_string] is set as expected.
Problems:
On create, the date gets set correctly, but the times are assigned to the year 2000, set in UTC, and won't display in local time on the front end.
On update, the date won't update. The times update but stay in UTC for 2000-01-01.
Longer Version
What makes this super bizarre to me is I have decent test coverage indicating all of this works at the model layer.
Here is the model:
# DEPENDENCIES
require 'chronic'
class Meeting < ActiveRecord::Base
# MASS ASSIGNMENT PROTECTION
attr_accessible :name, :location, :description, :contact_id, :member_id, :time_zone,
:date, :start_time, :end_time, :date_string, :start_time_string, :end_time_string
# RELATIONSHIPS
belongs_to :member
belongs_to :contact
# CALLBACKS
before_save :parse_time
# Time IO Formatting
attr_writer :date_string, :start_time_string, :end_time_string
# Display time as string, year optional
def date_string(year=true)
if date
str = "%B %e"
str += ", %Y" if year
date.strftime(str).gsub(' ',' ')
else
""
end
end
# Display time as string, AM/PM optional
def start_time_string(meridian=true)
if start_time
str = "%l:%M"
str += " %p" if meridian
start_time.strftime(str).lstrip
else
""
end
end
# Display time as string, AM/PM optional
def end_time_string(meridian=true)
if end_time
str = "%l:%M"
str += " %p" if meridian
end_time.strftime(str).lstrip
else
""
end
end
# Display Date and Time for Front-End
def time
date.year == Date.today.year ? y = false : y = true
start_time.meridian != end_time.meridian ? m = true : m = false
[date_string(y),'; ',start_time_string(m),' - ',end_time_string].join
end
private
# Time Input Processing, called in `before_save`
def parse_time
set_time_zone
self.date ||= #date_string ? Chronic.parse(#date_string).to_date : Date.today
self.start_time = Chronic.parse #start_time_string, :now => self.date
self.end_time = Chronic.parse #end_time_string, :now => self.date
end
def set_time_zone
if time_zone
Time.zone = time_zone
elsif member && member.time_zone
Time.zone = member.time_zone
end
Chronic.time_class = Time.zone
end
end
Here is the spec. Note that to test the parse_time callback in isolation I'm calling #meeting.send(:parse_time) in these tests whenever I'm not actually creating or updating a record.
require "minitest_helper"
describe Meeting do
before do
#meeting = Meeting.new
end
describe "accepting dates in natural language" do
it "should recognize months and days" do
#meeting.date_string = 'December 17'
#meeting.send(:parse_time)
#meeting.date.must_equal Date.new(Time.now.year,12,17)
end
it "should assume a start time is today" do
#meeting.start_time_string = '1pm'
#meeting.send(:parse_time)
#meeting.start_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Date.today.year,Date.today.month,Date.today.day, 13,0,0)
end
it "should assume an end time is today" do
#meeting.end_time_string = '3:30'
#meeting.send(:parse_time)
#meeting.end_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Date.today.year,Date.today.month,Date.today.day, 15,30,0)
end
it "should set start time to the given date" do
#meeting.date = Date.new(Time.now.year,12,1)
#meeting.start_time_string = '4:30 pm'
#meeting.send(:parse_time)
#meeting.start_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Time.now.year,12,1,16,30)
end
it "should set end time to the given date" do
#meeting.date = Date.new(Time.now.year,12,1)
#meeting.end_time_string = '6pm'
#meeting.send(:parse_time)
#meeting.end_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Time.now.year,12,1,18,0)
end
end
describe "displaying time" do
before do
#meeting.date = Date.new(Date.today.year,12,1)
#meeting.start_time = Time.new(Date.today.year,12,1,16,30)
#meeting.end_time = Time.new(Date.today.year,12,1,18,0)
end
it "should print a friendly time" do
#meeting.time.must_equal "December 1; 4:30 - 6:00 PM"
end
end
describe "displaying if nil" do
it "should handle nil date" do
#meeting.date_string.must_equal ""
end
it "should handle nil start_time" do
#meeting.start_time_string.must_equal ""
end
it "should handle nil end_time" do
#meeting.end_time_string.must_equal ""
end
end
describe "time zones" do
before do
#meeting.assign_attributes(
time_zone: 'Central Time (US & Canada)',
date_string: "December 1, #{Time.now.year}",
start_time_string: "4:30 PM",
end_time_string: "6:00 PM"
)
#meeting.save
end
it "should set meeting start times in the given time zone" do
Time.zone = 'Central Time (US & Canada)'
#meeting.start_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Time.now.year,12,1,16,30)
end
it "should set the correct UTC offset" do
#meeting.start_time.utc_offset.must_equal -(6*60*60)
end
after do
#meeting.destroy
end
end
describe "updating" do
before do
#m = Meeting.create(
time_zone: 'Central Time (US & Canada)',
date_string: "December 1, #{Time.now.year}",
start_time_string: "4:30 PM",
end_time_string: "6:00 PM"
)
#m.update_attributes start_time_string: '2pm', end_time_string: '3pm'
Time.zone = 'Central Time (US & Canada)'
end
it "should update start time via mass assignment" do
#m.start_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Time.now.year,12,1,14,00)
end
it "should update end time via mass assignment" do
#m.end_time.must_equal Time.zone.local(Time.now.year,12,1,15,00)
end
after do
#m.destroy
end
end
end
I have even specifically mixed in creating and updating records via mass assignment in later test methods to ensure that those work as expected. All those tests pass.
I appreciate any insight into the following:
Why doesn't the date update in the controller#update action?
Why aren't times getting the year from the date that is set? This works in the model and in specs, but not when submitted via form through the controller.
Why don't times get set to the time zone that is passed in from the form? Again, these specs pass, what is wrong on the controller?
Why won't times display in their time zone on the front end?
Thanks for the help, I feel like I must be losing the forest for the trees on this one as I've been going at it for hours.
Update:
Thanks to the help of AJcodez, I saw some of the issues:
Was assigning date wrong, thanks AJ! Now using:
if #date_string.present?
self.date = Chronic.parse(#date_string).to_date
elsif self.date.nil?
self.date = Date.today
end
I was using Chronic correctly, my mistake was at the database layer! I set the fields in the database to time instead of datetime, which ruins everything. Lesson to anyone reading this: never ever use time as a database field (unless you understand exactly what it does and why you're using it instead of datetime).
Same problem as above, changing the fields to datetime fixed the problem.
The problem here has to do with accessing time in the model vs. the view. If I move these time formatting methods into a helper so they're called in the current request scope they will work correctly.
Thanks AJ! Your suggestions got me past my blind spot.
Well here goes..
1 . Why doesn't the date update in the controller#update action?
I see two potential issues. Looks like you're not parsing the dates again. Try this:
def update
#meeting = #member.meetings.find(params[:id])
#meeting.assign_attributes params[:meeting]
#meeting.send :parse_time
if #meeting.save
...
assign_attributes sets but doesnt save new values: http://apidock.com/rails/ActiveRecord/AttributeAssignment/assign_attributes
Also, in your parse_time method, you use this assignment: self.date ||= which will always set self.date back to itself if it is assigned. In other words you can't update the date unless its falsey.
2 . Why aren't times getting the year from the date that is set? This works in the model and in specs, but not when submitted via form through the controller.
No idea, looks like you are using Chronic#parse correctly.
3 . Why don't times get set to the time zone that is passed in from the form? Again, these specs pass, what is wrong on the controller?
Try debugging time_zone and make sure it is returning whats in params[:meeting][:time_zone]. Again it looks correct by Chronic.
Side note: if you pass an invalid string to Time#zone= it will blow up with an error. For instance Time.zone = 'utc' is all bad.
4 . Why won't times display in their time zone on the front end?
See Time#in_time_zone http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/Time.html#method-i-in_time_zone and just explicitly name your time zone every time.
Not sure if you're already doing this, but try to explicitly save Times in UTC on the database, and then display them in local time.

Resources