Declare an enum attribute where the values map to integers in the database, but can be queried by name. Example:
class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
enum status: [ :active, :archived ]
end
# conversation.update! status: 0
conversation.active!
conversation.active? # => true
conversation.status # => "active"
# conversation.update! status: 1
conversation.archived!
conversation.archived? # => true
conversation.status # => "archived"
# conversation.status = 1
conversation.status = "archived"
conversation.status = nil
conversation.status.nil? # => true
conversation.status # => nil
Scopes based on the allowed values of the enum field will be provided as well. With the above example:
Conversation.active
Conversation.archived
You can set the default value from the database declaration, like:
create_table :conversations do |t|
t.column :status, :integer, default: 0
end
Good practice is to let the first declared status be the default.
Finally, it's also possible to explicitly map the relation between
attribute and database integer with a Hash
:
class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
enum status: { active: 0, archived: 1 }
end
Note that when an Array
is used, the implicit mapping from the
values to database integers is derived from the order the values appear in
the array. In the example, :active
is mapped to 0
as it's the first element, and :archived
is mapped to
1
. In general, the i
-th element is mapped to
i-1
in the database.
Therefore, once a value is added to the enum array, its position in the
array must be maintained, and new values should only be added to the end of
the array. To remove unused values, the explicit Hash
syntax
should be used.
In rare circumstances you might need to access the mapping directly. The mappings are exposed through a class method with the pluralized attribute name:
Conversation.statuses # => { "active" => 0, "archived" => 1 }
Use that class method when you need to know the ordinal value of an enum:
Conversation.where("status <> ?", Conversation.statuses[:archived])
Where conditions on an enum attribute must use the ordinal value of an enum.
- E
ENUM_CONFLICT_MESSAGE | = | \ "You tried to define an enum named \"%{enum}\" on the model \"%{klass}\", but " \ "this will generate a %{type} method \"%{method}\", which is already defined " \ "by %{source}." |
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/enum.rb, line 81 def enum(definitions) klass = self definitions.each do |name, values| # statuses = { } enum_values = ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess.new name = name.to_sym # def self.statuses statuses end detect_enum_conflict!(name, name.to_s.pluralize, true) klass.singleton_class.send(:define_method, name.to_s.pluralize) { enum_values } _enum_methods_module.module_eval do # def status=(value) self[:status] = statuses[value] end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{name}=") define_method("#{name}=") { |value| if enum_values.has_key?(value) || value.blank? self[name] = enum_values[value] elsif enum_values.has_value?(value) # Assigning a value directly is not a end-user feature, hence it's not documented. # This is used internally to make building objects from the generated scopes work # as expected, i.e. +Conversation.archived.build.archived?+ should be true. self[name] = value else raise ArgumentError, "'#{value}' is not a valid #{name}" end } # def status() statuses.key self[:status] end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, name) define_method(name) { enum_values.key self[name] } # def status_before_type_cast() statuses.key self[:status] end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{name}_before_type_cast") define_method("#{name}_before_type_cast") { enum_values.key self[name] } pairs = values.respond_to?(:each_pair) ? values.each_pair : values.each_with_index pairs.each do |value, i| enum_values[value] = i # def active?() status == 0 end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{value}?") define_method("#{value}?") { self[name] == i } # def active!() update! status: :active end klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{value}!") define_method("#{value}!") { update! name => value } # scope :active, -> { where status: 0 } klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, value, true) klass.scope value, -> { klass.where name => i } end end defined_enums[name.to_s] = enum_values end end