I have a field named number on the Address model, which has a default of 0 set at database level. If I do Address.new.number, I will get 0 back.
Now, I want to trigger a before_create callback only if number != <default value>. So, I will have before_create :callback, unless: <condition>. How can I check this using some Rails "logic"? I know I can compare to 0, but I'd rather compare to a dynamical value, as retrieved by Rails.
Default values are accessible in Address.column_defaults as a hash of {"column" => default}:
Address.column_defaults
#=> {"number" => 0, "street" => nil, ...}
You can also use the <attribute>_changed? methods Rails provides. This will be false unless you initialize the object with a non-default value.
Address.new.number_changed? #=> false
Address.new(number: 1).number_changed? #=> true
So your before_create can look like:
before_create :callback, if: :number_changed?
what about using the columns has?
Address.columns_hash['number'].default
should give you want
so maybe something like this
before_create :callback, unless: Proc.new { |address| address.number == Address.columns_hash['number'].default }
But this seems kinda odd over using something like number_changed?
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