Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How do you discover model attributes in Rails?

People also ask

What are attributes in Rails?

In Rails 5, model attributes go through the attributes API when they are set from user input (or any setter) and retrieved from the database (or any getter). Rails has used an internal attributes API for it's entire lifetime. When you set an integer field to “5”, it will be cast to 5.

What are models in Rails?

A Rails Model is a Ruby class that can add database records (think of whole rows in an Excel table), find particular data you're looking for, update that data, or remove data. These common operations are referred to by the acronym CRUD--Create, Remove, Update, Destroy.


For Schema related stuff

Model.column_names         
Model.columns_hash         
Model.columns 

For instance variables/attributes in an AR object

object.attribute_names                    
object.attribute_present?          
object.attributes

For instance methods without inheritance from super class

Model.instance_methods(false)

There is a rails plugin called Annotate models, that will generate your model attributes on the top of your model files here is the link:

https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models

to keep the annotation in sync, you can write a task to re-generate annotate models after each deploy.


If you're just interested in the properties and data types from the database, you can use Model.inspect.

irb(main):001:0> User.inspect
=> "User(id: integer, email: string, encrypted_password: string,
 reset_password_token: string, reset_password_sent_at: datetime,
 remember_created_at: datetime, sign_in_count: integer,
 current_sign_in_at: datetime, last_sign_in_at: datetime,
 current_sign_in_ip: string, last_sign_in_ip: string, created_at: datetime,
 updated_at: datetime)"

Alternatively, having run rake db:create and rake db:migrate for your development environment, the file db/schema.rb will contain the authoritative source for your database structure:

ActiveRecord::Schema.define(version: 20130712162401) do
  create_table "users", force: true do |t|
    t.string   "email",                  default: "", null: false
    t.string   "encrypted_password",     default: "", null: false
    t.string   "reset_password_token"
    t.datetime "reset_password_sent_at"
    t.datetime "remember_created_at"
    t.integer  "sign_in_count",          default: 0
    t.datetime "current_sign_in_at"
    t.datetime "last_sign_in_at"
    t.string   "current_sign_in_ip"
    t.string   "last_sign_in_ip"
    t.datetime "created_at"
    t.datetime "updated_at"
  end
end

To describe model I use following snippet

Model.columns.collect { |c| "#{c.name} (#{c.type})" }

Again this is if you are looking pretty print to describe you ActiveRecord without you going trough migrations or hopping that developer before you was nice enough to comment in attributes.


some_instance.attributes

Source: blog