Module: ActiveRecord::Aggregations::ClassMethods

Defined in:
lib/active_record/aggregations.rb

Overview

Active Record implements aggregation through a macro-like class method called composed_of for representing attributes as value objects. It expresses relationships like “Account [is] composed of Money [among other things]” or “Person [is] composed of [an] address”. Each call to the macro adds a description on how the value objects are created from the attributes of the entity object (when the entity is initialized either as a new object or from finding an existing) and how it can be turned back into attributes (when the entity is saved to the database). Example:

class Customer < ActiveRecord::Base
  composed_of :balance, :class_name => "Money", :mapping => %w(balance amount)
  composed_of :address, :mapping => [ %w(address_street street), %w(address_city city) ]
end

The customer class now has the following methods to manipulate the value objects:

  • Customer#balance, Customer#balance=(money)

  • Customer#address, Customer#address=(address)

These methods will operate with value objects like the ones described below:

class Money
  include Comparable
  attr_reader :amount, :currency
  EXCHANGE_RATES = { "USD_TO_DKK" => 6 }  

  def initialize(amount, currency = "USD") 
    @amount, @currency = amount, currency 
  end

  def exchange_to(other_currency)
    exchanged_amount = (amount * EXCHANGE_RATES["#{currency}_TO_#{other_currency}"]).floor
    Money.new(exchanged_amount, other_currency)
  end

  def ==(other_money)
    amount == other_money.amount && currency == other_money.currency
  end

  def <=>(other_money)
    if currency == other_money.currency
      amount <=> amount
    else
      amount <=> other_money.exchange_to(currency).amount
    end
  end
end

class Address
  attr_reader :street, :city
  def initialize(street, city) 
    @street, @city = street, city 
  end

  def close_to?(other_address) 
    city == other_address.city 
  end

  def ==(other_address)
    city == other_address.city && street == other_address.street
  end
end

Now it’s possible to access attributes from the database through the value objects instead. If you choose to name the composition the same as the attributes name, it will be the only way to access that attribute. That’s the case with our balance attribute. You interact with the value objects just like you would any other attribute, though:

customer.balance = Money.new(20)     # sets the Money value object and the attribute
customer.balance                     # => Money value object
customer.balance.exchanged_to("DKK") # => Money.new(120, "DKK")
customer.balance > Money.new(10)     # => true
customer.balance == Money.new(20)    # => true
customer.balance < Money.new(5)      # => false

Value objects can also be composed of multiple attributes, such as the case of Address. The order of the mappings will determine the order of the parameters. Example:

customer.address_street = "Hyancintvej"
customer.address_city   = "Copenhagen"
customer.address        # => Address.new("Hyancintvej", "Copenhagen")
customer.address = Address.new("May Street", "Chicago")
customer.address_street # => "May Street" 
customer.address_city   # => "Chicago"

Writing value objects

Value objects are immutable and interchangeable objects that represent a given value, such as a Money object representing $5. Two Money objects both representing $5 should be equal (through methods such == and <=> from Comparable if ranking makes sense). This is unlike a entity objects where equality is determined by identity. An entity class such as Customer can easily have two different objects that both have an address on Hyancintvej. Entity identity is determined by object or relational unique identifiers (such as primary keys). Normal ActiveRecord::Base classes are entity objects.

It’s also important to treat the value objects as immutable. Don’t allow the Money object to have its amount changed after creation. Create a new money object with the new value instead. This is exemplified by the Money#exchanged_to method that returns a new value object instead of changing its own values. Active Record won’t persist value objects that have been changed through other means than the writer method.

The immutable requirement is enforced by Active Record by freezing any object assigned as a value object. Attempting to change it afterwards will result in a TypeError.

Read more about value objects on c2.com/cgi/wiki?ValueObject and on the dangers of not keeping value objects immutable on c2.com/cgi/wiki?ValueObjectsShouldBeImmutable

Instance Method Summary collapse

Instance Method Details

#composed_of(part_id, options = {}) ⇒ Object

Adds the a reader and writer method for manipulating a value object, so composed_of :address would add address and address=(new_address).

Options are:

  • :class_name - specify the class name of the association. Use it only if that name can’t be inferred from the part id. So composed_of :address will by default be linked to the Address class, but if the real class name is CompanyAddress, you’ll have to specify it with this option.

  • :mapping - specifies a number of mapping arrays (attribute, parameter) that bind an attribute name to a constructor parameter on the value class.

Option examples:

composed_of :temperature, :mapping => %w(reading celsius)
composed_of :balance, :class_name => "Money", :mapping => %w(balance amount)
composed_of :address, :mapping => [ %w(address_street street), %w(address_city city) ]
composed_of :gps_location


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# File 'lib/active_record/aggregations.rb', line 122

def composed_of(part_id, options = {})
  validate_options([ :class_name, :mapping ], options.keys)

  name        = part_id.id2name
  class_name  = options[:class_name] || name_to_class_name(name)
  mapping     = options[:mapping] || [ name, name ]

  reader_method(name, class_name, mapping)
  writer_method(name, class_name, mapping)
end