Rails: #update_attribute vs #update_attributes
obj.update_attribute(:only_one_field, 'Some Value')
obj.update_attributes(field1: 'value', field2: 'value2', field3: 'value3')
Both of these will update an object without having to explicitly tell ActiveRecord to update.
Rails API says:
update_attribute
Updates a single attribute and saves the record without going through the normal validation procedure. This is especially useful for boolean flags on existing records. The regular update_attribute method in Base is replaced with this when the validations module is mixed in, which it is by default.
update_attributes
Updates all the attributes from the passed-in Hash and saves the record. If the object is invalid, the saving will fail and false will be returned.
So if I don't want to have the object validated I should use #update_attribute
. What if I have this update on a #before_save
, will it stackoverflow?
My question is does #update_attribute
also bypass the before save or just the validation.
Also, what is the correct syntax to pass a hash to #update_attributes
... check out my example at the top.
Please refer to update_attribute
. On clicking show source you will get following code
# File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/base.rb, line 2614
2614: def update_attribute(name, value)
2615: send(name.to_s + '=', value)
2616: save(false)
2617: end
and now refer update_attributes
and look at its code you get
# File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/base.rb, line 2621
2621: def update_attributes(attributes)
2622: self.attributes = attributes
2623: save
2624: end
the difference between two is update_attribute
uses save(false)
whereas update_attributes
uses save
or you can say save(true)
.
Sorry for the long description but what I want to say is important. save(perform_validation = true)
, if perform_validation
is false it bypasses (skips will be the proper word) all the validations associated with save
.
For second question
Also, what is the correct syntax to pass a hash to update_attributes... check out my example at the top.
Your example is correct.
Object.update_attributes(:field1 => "value", :field2 => "value2", :field3 => "value3")
or
Object.update_attributes :field1 => "value", :field2 => "value2", :field3 => "value3"
or if you get all fields data & name in a hash say params[:user]
here use just
Object.update_attributes(params[:user])
Tip: update_attribute
is being deprecated in Rails 4 via Commit a7f4b0a1. It removes update_attribute
in favor of update_column
.
update_attribute
This method update single attribute of object without invoking model based validation.
obj = Model.find_by_id(params[:id])
obj.update_attribute :language, “java”
update_attributes
This method update multiple attribute of single object and also pass model based validation.
attributes = {:name => “BalaChandar”, :age => 23}
obj = Model.find_by_id(params[:id])
obj.update_attributes(attributes)
Hope this answer will clear out when to use what method of active record.