4

Am using Rails version 3. I want to create a model , in which i have a field called "Page-visits" I want it to hold range as value, eg: (50 .. 100) , (1000 .. 5000) etc. How to achieve this ?? Even if there is no such data-type at present in rails, I would like to know other ways of how to achieve this ?

3 Answers 3

8

I'm assuming that you actually want to store a range in your model, and not a value within a range. (If you wanted to do the latter, validations would be your answer).

So, range. In a model. You've got two options, each of which are pretty decent.

Option 1: Create a column (range_column) with type 'text'. Pass a Ruby range object to the column, like @my_model_object.range_column = (50..100). Tell Rails to serialize your range like this:

class MyModel < ActiveRecord::Base
  serialize :range_column
end

Now, Rails will automatically convert your range to YAML for database storage, and convert it back to the range object when it retrieves the record again. Doesn't get much easier than that!

Option 2: Create two columns (range_start and range_end) with type 'integer'. Set up something in your model like this:

class MyModel < ActiveRecord::Base
  def range=(rstart, rend)
    self.range_start = rstart
    self.range_end   = rend
  end

  def range
    (range_start..range_end) # or as an array, or however you want to return it
  end
end

The first option is easier (and, in my opinion, better), while the second gives you a tad bit more flexibility out of the box in case you don't want to use a Ruby range object (though, why wouldn't you?).

1
  • In the case of serialize, should/could we use serialize :range_column, Range or am I misunderstanding the intended use of that argument?
    – Ziggy
    Mar 28, 2013 at 20:50
3

Rails has a range datatype if your database supports it.

Here is a postgresql example: Rails Range Types with PostgreSQL

# db/migrate/20130923065404_create_events.rb
create_table :events do |t|
  t.daterange 'duration'
end

# app/models/event.rb
class Event < ApplicationRecord
end

# Usage
Event.create(duration: Date.new(2014, 2, 11)..Date.new(2014, 2, 12))

event = Event.first
event.duration # => Tue, 11 Feb 2014...Thu, 13 Feb 2014

## All Events on a given date
Event.where("duration @> ?::date", Date.new(2014, 2, 12))

## Working with range bounds
event = Event.
  select("lower(duration) AS starts_at").
  select("upper(duration) AS ends_at").first

event.starts_at # => Tue, 11 Feb 2014
event.ends_at # => Thu, 13 Feb 2014
2
1

I would suggest creating model with attribute page_visits which holds exact amount of visits and define method in action, smth like

def page_visit_range
  #case when statement for self.page_visits or some smarter maths to return range
end

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