I may have had a similar problem (Rails 4.2.0). I created a checkbox, but it would be ignored and never report and error if unchecked. I found that adding the parameter to the .permit
part of my Strong Parameters allowed it to be present.
In my view template for my _form
I have something like this:
<div class="field">
<%= label_tag :tos, 'I accepts the TOS' %><br>
<%= f.check_box :tos %>
</div>
I generated my model using scaffold, so my create
method start like this
def create
@thing = Thing.new(thing_params)
then near the bottom I have the following for thing_params
def thing_params
params.require(:thing).permit(:field1, :field2, :tos)
end
in my model I used the following:
validates_acceptance_of :tos
If I leave out ':toslike this
params.require(:thing).permit(:field1, :field2) it will not pop up an error and allows it to continue. This seems counter-intuitive because if Strong Parameters is removing the :tos field then I would think the validate_acceptance would fail.
I had initially just create a checkbox without using f.check_box
. Now, if I even try to call the new
route without :tos
" being listed as permitted, rails throws an error. There also seems to be some rails magic going on because if I remove the validates_acceptance_of
from my model, I receive an NoMethodError
error when rendering my view saying undefined method
tos'` for the line
<%= f.check_box :tos %>
Would be great if someone else could explain what exactly is going on as I just hacked this together from googling and guessing.