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Update:

This issue was not properly explored. The real issue lies within render :json.

The first code paste in the original question will yield the expected result. However, there is still a caveat. See this example:

render :json => current_user

is NOT the same as

render :json => current_user.to_json

That is, render :json will not automatically call the to_json method associated with the User object. In fact, if to_json is being overridden on the User model, render :json => @user will generate the ArgumentError described below.

summary

# works if User#to_json is not overridden
render :json => current_user

# If User#to_json is overridden, User requires explicit call
render :json => current_user.to_json

This all seems silly to me. This seems to be telling me that render is not actually calling Model#to_json when type :json is specified. Can someone explain what's really going on here?

Any genii that can help me with this can likely answer my other question: How to build a JSON response by combining @foo.to_json(options) and @bars.to_json(options) in Rails


Original Question:

I've seen some other examples on SO, but I none do what I'm looking for.

I'm trying:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base

  # this actually works! (see update summary above)
  def to_json
    super(:only => :username, :methods => [:foo, :bar])
  end

end

I'm getting ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (1 for 0) in

/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1/gems/activesupport-2.3.5/lib/active_support/json/encoders/object.rb:4:in `to_json

Any ideas?

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Your example works in one of my models. Do any of the username, foo or bar methods expect arguments? – Jonathan Julian Apr 3 '10 at 19:07
No, username is not a method and foo and bar do not require methods. I updated my question to show where the error is happening. – macek Apr 3 '10 at 19:20
I'm running 1.8.7. You'll have to open up that file and see why it's passing an arg to a method that expects zero args. – Jonathan Julian Apr 3 '10 at 19:21
feedback

5 Answers

up vote 61 down vote accepted

You are getting ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (1 for 0) because to_json needs to be overridden with one parameter, the options hash.

def to_json(options)
  ...
end

Longer explanation of to_json, as_json, and rendering:

In ActiveSupport 2.3.3, as_json was added to address issues like the one you have encountered. The creation of the json should be separate from the rendering of the json.

Now, anytime to_json is called on an object, as_json is invoked to create the data structure, and then that hash is encoded as a JSON string using ActiveSupport::json.encode. This happens for all types: object, numeric, date, string, etc (see the ActiveSupport code).

ActiveRecord objects behave the same way. There is a default as_json implementation that creates a hash that includes all the model's attributes. You should override as_json in your Model to create the JSON structure you want. as_json, just like the old to_json, takes an option hash where you can specify attributes and methods to include declaratively.

def as_json(options)
  # this example ignores the user's options
  super(:only => [:email, :handle])
end

In your controller, render :json => o can accept a string or an object. If it's a string, it's passed through as the response body, if it's an object, to_json is called, which triggers as_json as explained above.

So, as long as your models are properly represented with as_json overrides (or not), your controller code to display one model should look like this:

format.json { render :json => @user }

The moral of the story is: Avoid calling to_json directly, allow render to do that for you. If you need to tweak the JSON output, call as_json.

format.json { render :json => 
    @user.as_json(:only => [:username], :methods => [:avatar]) }
link|improve this answer
@Jonathan Julian, this is a very helpful explanation of as_json. As you can see in the ActiveRecord::Serialization docs (api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/…), there is very little (no) documentation for this. I will give this a try :) – macek Apr 4 '10 at 17:53
@Jonathan Julian, if I could up-vote this 10 times, I would. Where the heck are the as_json docs! Thanks again :) – macek Apr 4 '10 at 18:07
+1 Nice answer Jon! I'm on Sinatra so added another answer below – Tony Mar 25 '11 at 15:44
feedback

If you're having issues with this in Rails 3, override serializable_hash instead of as_json. This will get your XML formatting for free too :)

This took me forever to figure out. Hope that helps someone.

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wish I could give you more than one up vote :) – mikeycgto Oct 22 '10 at 19:54
Glad it helped you :) – Sam Soffes Oct 24 '10 at 23:55
Does anyone know of any good write-ups about the method serializable_hash? When I use it, it changes my subsequent xml output from wrapping the object with its name (e.g. "quote" for a quote object") to instead always wrap it with "<hash>". – Tyler Collier Oct 20 '11 at 0:17
feedback

Override not to_json, but as_json. And from as_json call what you want:

Try this:

def as_json 
 { :username => username, :foo => foo, :bar => bar }
end
link|improve this answer
Isn't as_json just for ActiveResource? – Jonathan Julian Apr 3 '10 at 19:08
Apparently ActiveRecord::Serialization has as_json api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Serialization.html – glebm Apr 3 '10 at 19:12
@glebm, I tried this and I'm getting the same result. I updated my question to show you. – macek Apr 3 '10 at 19:22
I updated my answer, can you try it? – glebm Apr 3 '10 at 19:25
1  
Have you tried render :json => current_user.as_json – glebm Apr 3 '10 at 19:42
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feedback

Have you heard about tequila?

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I checked it out, but wasn't a big fan. Thanks for linking though! Definitely interesting. – Sam Soffes Sep 27 '11 at 0:32
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