0

In my model I have the following validator:

validates :terms, acceptance: true, on: :create, allow_nil: false
attr_accessor :terms

and in my form I have:

= simple_form_for @reservation do |f|
  = f.error_notification
  = f.input :terms, as: :boolean 

The problem is that when user not accept the terms it not showing any error, why?

3

3 Answers 3

7

Try this:

validates :terms, :acceptance => {:accept => true} , on: :create, allow_nil: false
2
  • 2
    allow_nil: false saved me. Thanks!
    – luiscrjr
    Dec 16, 2016 at 22:36
  • As Eric G pointed out below you will still need to add :acceptance to your permitted parameters. allow_nil: false is not needed. Jul 12, 2017 at 17:58
5

Problem may have terms as an actual column in the table. In general validates_acceptance_of is used without such a column, in which case it defines an attribute accessor and uses that for its validation.

In order for validates_acceptance_of to work when it maps to a real table column it is necessary to pass the :accept option, like:

validates :terms, :acceptance => {:accept => true} , :on => :create , allow_nil: false

The reason for this has to do with typecasting in Active Record. When the named attribute actually exists, AR performs typecasting based on the database column type. In most cases the acceptance column will be defined as a boolean and so model_object.terms will return true or false.

When there's no such column attr_accessor :terms simply returns the value passed in to the model object from the params hash which will normally be "1" from a checkbox.

Via noodl

1
  • 1
    Thank's for help but this is not solving the problem. It still not showing any validation errors. Jun 16, 2014 at 5:57
4

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 thisparams.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 methodtos'` 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.

1
  • True: you need to add your acceptance param to the strong parameters. If you don't do that and submit the form, the form will be accepted regardless of the state of checkbox.
    – NNA
    Sep 20, 2016 at 12:24

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.