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[R] | limit | |
[R] | precision | |
[R] | scale |
Type casts a value from user input (e.g. from a setter). This value may be a string from the form builder, or a ruby object passed to a setter. There is currently no way to differentiate between which source it came from.
The return value of this method will be returned from ActiveRecord::AttributeMethods::Read#read_attribute
. See also: Value#cast_value
.
value
The raw input, as provided to the attribute setter.
Determines whether a value has changed for dirty checking. old_value
and new_value
will always be type-cast. Types should not need to override this method.
Determines whether the mutable value has been modified since it was read. Returns false
by default. If your type returns an object which could be mutated, you should override this method. You will need to either:
-
pass
new_value
toValue#serialize
and compare it toraw_old_value
or
-
pass
raw_old_value
toValue#deserialize
and compare it tonew_value
raw_old_value
The original value, before being passed to deserialize
.
new_value
The current value, after type casting.
Converts a value from database input to the appropriate ruby type. The return value of this method will be returned from ActiveRecord::AttributeMethods::Read#read_attribute
. The default implementation just calls Value#cast
.
value
The raw input, as provided from the database.
Casts a value from the ruby type to a type that the database knows how to understand. The returned value from this method should be a String
, Numeric
, Date
, Time
, Symbol
, true
, false
, or nil
.
Convenience method for types which do not need separate type casting behavior for user and database inputs. Called by Value#cast
for values except nil
.