How to test for (ActiveRecord) object equality

Solution 1:

Rails deliberately delegates equality checks to the identity column. If you want to know if two AR objects contain the same stuff, compare the result of calling #attributes on both.

Solution 2:

Take a look at the API docs on the == (alias eql?) operation for ActiveRecord::Base

Returns true if comparison_object is the same exact object, or comparison_object is of the same type and self has an ID and it is equal to comparison_object.id.

Note that new records are different from any other record by definition, unless the other record is the receiver itself. Besides, if you fetch existing records with select and leave the ID out, you’re on your own, this predicate will return false.

Note also that destroying a record preserves its ID in the model instance, so deleted models are still comparable.

Solution 3:

If you want to compare two model instances based on their attributes, you will probably want to exclude certain irrelevant attributes from your comparison, such as: id, created_at, and updated_at. (I would consider those to be more metadata about the record than part of the record's data itself.)

This might not matter when you are comparing two new (unsaved) records (since id, created_at, and updated_at will all be nil until saved), but I sometimes find it necessary to compare a saved object with an unsaved one (in which case == would give you false since nil != 5). Or I want to compare two saved objects to find out if they contain the same data (so the ActiveRecord == operator doesn't work, because it returns false if they have different id's, even if they are otherwise identical).

My solution to this problem is to add something like this in the models that you want to be comparable using attributes:

  def self.attributes_to_ignore_when_comparing
    [:id, :created_at, :updated_at]
  end

  def identical?(other)
    self. attributes.except(*self.class.attributes_to_ignore_when_comparing.map(&:to_s)) ==
    other.attributes.except(*self.class.attributes_to_ignore_when_comparing.map(&:to_s))
  end

Then in my specs I can write such readable and succinct things as this:

Address.last.should be_identical(Address.new({city: 'City', country: 'USA'}))

I'm planning on forking the active_record_attributes_equality gem and changing it to use this behavior so that this can be more easily reused.

Some questions I have, though, include:

  • Does such a gem already exist??
  • What should the method be called? I don't think overriding the existing == operator is a good idea, so for now I'm calling it identical?. But maybe something like practically_identical? or attributes_eql? would be more accurate, since it's not checking if they're strictly identical (some of the attributes are allowed to be different.)...
  • attributes_to_ignore_when_comparing is too verbose. Not that this will need to be explicitly added to each model if they want to use the gem's defaults. Maybe allow the default to be overridden with a class macro like ignore_for_attributes_eql :last_signed_in_at, :updated_at

Comments are welcome...

Update: Instead of forking the active_record_attributes_equality, I wrote a brand-new gem, active_record_ignored_attributes, available at http://github.com/TylerRick/active_record_ignored_attributes and http://rubygems.org/gems/active_record_ignored_attributes

Solution 4:

 META = [:id, :created_at, :updated_at, :interacted_at, :confirmed_at]

 def eql_attributes?(original,new)
   original = original.attributes.with_indifferent_access.except(*META)
   new = new.attributes.symbolize_keys.with_indifferent_access.except(*META)
   original == new
 end

 eql_attributes? attrs, attrs2