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Active Model Basics

This guide should provide you with all you need to get started using model classes. Active Model allows for Action Pack helpers to interact with plain Ruby objects. Active Model also helps build custom ORMs for use outside of the Rails framework.

After reading this guide, you will be able to add to plain Ruby objects:


Introduction

Active Model is a library containing various modules used in developing classes that need some features present on Active Record. Some of these modules are explained below.

Attribute Methods

The ::ActiveModel::AttributeMethods module can add custom prefixes and suffixes on methods of a class. It is used by defining the prefixes and suffixes and which methods on the object will use them.

class Person
  include ActiveModel::AttributeMethods

  attribute_method_prefix 'reset_'
  attribute_method_suffix '_highest?'
  define_attribute_methods 'age'

  attr_accessor :age

  private
    def reset_attribute(attribute)
      send("#{attribute}=", 0)
    end

    def attribute_highest?(attribute)
      send(attribute) > 100
    end
end

person = Person.new
person.age = 110
person.age_highest?  # => true
person.reset_age     # => 0
person.age_highest?  # => false

Callbacks

::ActiveModel::Callbacks gives Active Record style callbacks. This provides an ability to define callbacks which run at appropriate times. After defining callbacks, you can wrap them with before, after and around custom methods.

class Person
  extend ActiveModel::Callbacks

  define_model_callbacks :update

  before_update :reset_me

  def update
    run_callbacks(:update) do
      # This method is called when update is called on an object.
    end
  end

  def reset_me
    # This method is called when update is called on an object as a before_update callback is defined.
  end
end

Conversion

If a class defines persisted? and id methods, then you can include the ::ActiveModel::Conversion module in that class and call the Rails conversion methods on objects of that class.

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Conversion

  def persisted?
    false
  end

  def id
    nil
  end
end

person = Person.new
person.to_model == person  # => true
person.to_key              # => nil
person.to_param            # => nil

Dirty

An object becomes dirty when it has gone through one or more changes to its attributes and has not been saved. ::ActiveModel::Dirty gives the ability to check whether an object has been changed or not. It also has attribute based accessor methods. Let's consider a Person class with attributes first_name and last_name:

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Dirty
  define_attribute_methods :first_name, :last_name

  def first_name
    @first_name
  end

  def first_name=(value)
    first_name_will_change!
    @first_name = value
  end

  def last_name
    @last_name
  end

  def last_name=(value)
    last_name_will_change!
    @last_name = value
  end

  def save
    # do save work...
    changes_applied
  end
end

Querying object directly for its list of all changed attributes.

person = Person.new
person.changed? # => false

person.first_name = "First Name"
person.first_name # => "First Name"

# returns if any attribute has changed.
person.changed? # => true

# returns a list of attributes that have changed before saving.
person.changed # => ["first_name"]

# returns a hash of the attributes that have changed with their original values.
person.changed_attributes # => {"first_name"=>nil}

# returns a hash of changes, with the attribute names as the keys, and the values will be an array of the old and new value for that field.
person.changes # => {"first_name"=>[nil, "First Name"]}

Attribute based accessor methods

Track whether the particular attribute has been changed or not.

# attr_name_changed?
person.first_name # => "First Name"
person.first_name_changed? # => true

Track what was the previous value of the attribute.

# attr_name_was accessor
person.first_name_was # => nil

Track both previous and current value of the changed attribute. Returns an array if changed, else returns nil.

# attr_name_change
person.first_name_change # => [nil, "First Name"]
person.last_name_change # => nil

Validations

::ActiveModel::Validations module adds the ability to validate class objects like in Active Record.

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Validations

  attr_accessor :name, :email, :token

  validates :name, presence: true
  validates_format_of :email, with: /\A([^\s]+)((?:[-a-z0-9]\.)[a-z]{2,})\z/i
  validates! :token, presence: true
end

person = Person.new
person.token = "2b1f325"
person.valid?                        # => false
person.name = 'vishnu'
person.email = 'me'
person.valid?                        # => false
person.email = 'me@vishnuatrai.com'
person.valid?                        # => true
person.token = nil
person.valid?                        # => raises ActiveModel::StrictValidationFailed

Naming

::ActiveModel::Naming adds a number of class methods which make the naming and routing easier to manage. The module defines the model_name class method which will define a number of accessors using some ::ActiveSupport::Inflector methods.

class Person
  extend ActiveModel::Naming
end

Person.model_name.name                # => "Person"
Person.model_name.singular            # => "person"
Person.model_name.plural              # => "people"
Person.model_name.element             # => "person"
Person.model_name.human               # => "Person"
Person.model_name.collection          # => "people"
Person.model_name.param_key           # => "person"
Person.model_name.i18n_key            # => :person
Person.model_name.route_key           # => "people"
Person.model_name.singular_route_key  # => "person"

Model

::ActiveModel::Model adds the ability to a class to work with Action Pack and Action View right out of the box.

class EmailContact
  include ActiveModel::Model

  attr_accessor :name, :email, :message
  validates :name, :email, :message, presence: true

  def deliver
    if valid?
      # deliver email
    end
  end
end

When including ::ActiveModel::Model you get some features like:

It also gives you the ability to initialize an object with a hash of attributes, much like any Active Record object.

email_contact = EmailContact.new(name: 'David',
                                 email: 'david@example.com',
                                 message: 'Hello World')
email_contact.name       # => 'David'
email_contact.email      # => 'david@example.com'
email_contact.valid?     # => true
email_contact.persisted? # => false

Any class that includes ::ActiveModel::Model can be used with form_for, render and any other Action View helper methods, just like Active Record objects.

Serialization

::ActiveModel::Serialization provides a basic serialization for your object. You need to declare an attributes hash which contains the attributes you want to serialize. Attributes must be strings, not symbols.

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Serialization

  attr_accessor :name

  def attributes
    {'name' => nil}
  end
end

Now you can access a serialized hash of your object using the serializable_hash.

person = Person.new
person.serializable_hash   # => {"name"=>nil}
person.name = "Bob"
person.serializable_hash   # => {"name"=>"Bob"}

ActiveModel::Serializers

Rails provides two serializers ::ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON and ::ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml. Both of these modules automatically include the ::ActiveModel::Serialization.

ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON

To use the ::ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON you only need to change from ::ActiveModel::Serialization to ::ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON.

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON

  attr_accessor :name

  def attributes
    {'name' => nil}
  end
end

With the as_json you have a hash representing the model.

person = Person.new
person.as_json # => {"name"=>nil}
person.name = "Bob"
person.as_json # => {"name"=>"Bob"}

From a JSON string you define the attributes of the model. You need to have the attributes= method defined on your class:

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON

  attr_accessor :name

  def attributes=(hash)
    hash.each do |key, value|
      send("#{key}=", value)
    end
  end

  def attributes
    {'name' => nil}
  end
end

Now it is possible to create an instance of person and set the attributes using from_json.

json = { name: 'Bob' }.to_json
person = Person.new
person.from_json(json) # => #<Person:0x00000100c773f0 @name="Bob">
person.name            # => "Bob"
ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml

To use the ::ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml you only need to change from ::ActiveModel::Serialization to ::ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml.

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml

  attr_accessor :name

  def attributes
    {'name' => nil}
  end
end

With the to_xml you have a XML representing the model.

person = Person.new
person.to_xml # => "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n<person>\n  <name nil=\"true\"/>\n</person>\n"
person.name = "Bob"
person.to_xml # => "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n<person>\n  <name>Bob</name>\n</person>\n"

From a XML string you define the attributes of the model. You need to have the attributes= method defined on your class:

class Person
  include ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml

  attr_accessor :name

  def attributes=(hash)
    hash.each do |key, value|
      send("#{key}=", value)
    end
  end

  def attributes
    {'name' => nil}
  end
end

Now it is possible to create an instance of person and set the attributes using from_xml.

xml = { name: 'Bob' }.to_xml
person = Person.new
person.from_xml(xml) # => #<Person:0x00000100c773f0 @name="Bob">
person.name          # => "Bob"

Translation

::ActiveModel::Translation provides integration between your object and the Rails internationalization (i18n) framework.

class Person
  extend ActiveModel::Translation
end

With the human_attribute_name you can transform attribute names into a more human format. The human format is defined in your locale file.

Person.human_attribute_name('name') # => "Nome"

Lint Tests

::ActiveModel::Lint::Tests allow you to test whether an object is compliant with the Active Model API.

$ rake test

Run options: --seed 14596

# Running:

......

Finished in 0.024899s, 240.9735 runs/s, 1204.8677 assertions/s.

6 runs, 30 assertions, 0 failures, 0 errors, 0 skips

An object is not required to implement all APIs in order to work with Action Pack. This module only intends to provide guidance in case you want all features out of the box.

SecurePassword

::ActiveModel::SecurePassword provides a way to securely store any password in an encrypted form. On including this module, a has_secure_password class method is provided which defines an accessor named password with certain validations on it.

Requirements

::ActiveModel::SecurePassword depends on the bcrypt, so include this gem in your Gemfile to use ::ActiveModel::SecurePassword correctly. In order to make this work, the model must have an accessor named password_digest. The has_secure_password will add the following validations on the password accessor:

  1. Password should be present.
  2. Password should be equal to its confirmation.
  3. This maximum length of a password is 72 (required by bcrypt on which ActiveModel::SecurePassword depends)

Examples

class Person
  include ActiveModel::SecurePassword
  has_secure_password
  attr_accessor :password_digest
end

person = Person.new

# When password is blank.
person.valid? # => false

# When the confirmation doesn't match the password.
person.password = 'aditya'
person.password_confirmation = 'nomatch'
person.valid? # => false

# When the length of password, exceeds 72.
person.password = person.password_confirmation = 'a' * 100
person.valid? # => false

# When all validations are passed.
person.password = person.password_confirmation = 'aditya'
person.valid? # => true