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EnumeratedField is a library that provides some nice methods when a string column is used like an enumeration, meaning there is a list of allowable values for the string column. Typically you want the display value as seen by the end user to differ from the stored value, allowing you to easily change the display value at anytime without migrating data, and this little gem helps you with that.

Usage

enum_field(field_name, choices, options = {})

Available options are:

  • :validate, whether to validate that the value is in the given list of choices. Defaults to true.
  • :allow_nil, whether a nil value passes validation. Defaults to false.
  • :allow_blank, whether a blank (nil, "") value passes validation. Defaults to false.

The default validation uses ActiveModel's inclusion validations. If using on a class without ActiveModel use :validate => false to disable these.

Example

class Hike < ActiveRecord::Base
  include EnumeratedField

  # default form
  enum_field :duration, [
    ['Short', 'short'],
    ['Really, really long', 'long']
  ]
  # disable default validation
  enum_field :trail, [
    ['Pacific Crest Trail', 'pct'],
    ['Continental Divide Trail', 'cdt'],
    ['Superior Hiking Trail', 'sht']
  ], :validate => false
end

> hike = Hike.create(:trail => 'pct', :duration => 'long')

Confirm Values

> hike.trail_sht?
=> false

> hike.trail_pct?
=> true

> hike.duration_long?
=> true

> hike.duration_short?
=> false

Display Selected Value

> hike.trail_display
=> "Pacific Crest Trail"

> hike.duration_display
=> "Really, really long"

Validation

> hike.valid?
=> true

> hike.duration = 'forever'
> hike.valid?
=> false

List Available Values

> hike.trail_values # useful to provide to options_for_select when constructing forms
=> [['Pacific Crest Trail', 'pct'], ['Continental Divide Trail', 'cdt'], ['Superior Hiking Trail', 'sht']]
> Hike.trail_values # or get it from the class instead of the instance, if you like
=> [['Pacific Crest Trail', 'pct'], ['Continental Divide Trail', 'cdt'], ['Superior Hiking Trail', 'sht']]
> Hike.trail_values_for_json # or get a has for injecting into JSON or wherever
=> [{:display => 'Pacific Crest Trail', :value => 'pct'}, {:display => 'Continental Divide Trail', :value => 'cdt'}, {:display => 'Superior Hiking Trail', :value => 'sht'}]

ActiveRecord Scopes

These scopes are only created when your object is an ActiveRecord model.

# performs Hike.where(:trail => Hike::TRAIL_CDT)
> Hike.trail_cdt

# performs Hike.where(:duration => Hike::DURATION_LONG)
> Hike.duration_long

# performs Hike.where(Hike.arel_table[:trail].not_eq(Hike::TRAIL_CDT))
> Hike.trail_not_cdt

# performs Hike.where(Hike.arel_table[:duration].not_eq(Hike::DURATION_LONG))
> Hike.duration_not_long

Use Constants for Keys

> Hike::TRAIL_PCT
=> :pct
> Hike::TRAIL_SHT
=> :sht

Display Specified Value

> hike.trail_display_for("sht")
=> "Superior Hiking Trail"

> hike.duration_display_for("short")
=> "Short"

Value for Specified Display

> hike.trail_value_for("Superior Hiking Trail")
=> "sht"

> hike.duration_value_for("Short")
=> "short"

These methods are all prefixed with the field name by design, which allows multiple fields on a model to exist which potentially have the same values.

TESTS

Run tests with bundle exec rake test (or just rake test if you're daring).

TODO

  • Provide any support needed for defining columns on MySQL databases as enum columns instead of string columns.