357

In rails >4.0.0 generators creates CRUD operations with before_action not before_filter. It seems to do the same thing. So what's the difference between these two?

6 Answers 6

545

As we can see in ActionController::Base, before_action is just a new syntax for before_filter.

However the before_filter syntax is deprecated in Rails 5.0 and will be removed in Rails 5.1

11
  • 43
    On the one hand deprecating has sense but on the other there is a good practice in rails and in ruby to have several aliases for one method so you can use it in different contexts without loss of meaning.
    – freemanoid
    May 13, 2013 at 11:04
  • 4
    In 4.2 They are not deprecating it, but removing it from the docs since it is discouraged. edgeguides.rubyonrails.org/… Dec 3, 2014 at 23:18
  • 18
    If it's discouraged, then why wouldn't you deprecate it? Silly. Jan 16, 2015 at 21:20
  • 4
    @JohnWhitley - deprecation doesn't break the API. That's the whole point of deprecation. Apr 29, 2015 at 14:26
  • 9
    @JohnWhitley - The spamming is for a reason. Any well-disciplined project should address deprecation warnings by not using deprecated functions. May 1, 2015 at 13:55
72

It is just syntax difference, in rails app there is CRUD, and seven actions basically by name index, new, create, show, update, edit, destroy.

Rails 4 make it developer friendly to change syntax before filter to before action.

before_action call method before the actions which we declare, like

before_action :set_event, only: [:show, :update, :destroy, :edit]

set_event is a method which will call always before show, update, edit and destroy.

0
33

It is just a name change. before_action is more specific, because it gets executed before an action.

1

before_filter/before_action: means anything to be executed before any action executes.

Both are same. they are just alias for each other as their behavior is same.

0
0

use only before_action with rspec-rails, capybara as before_filter will misbehave to give surprises during testing

class TodosController < ApplicationController
  before_filter :authenticate

  def index
    @todos = Todo.all
  end
  ## Rest of the code follows
end

before_filter

feature 'User creates todo' do
  scenario 'successfully' do
    sign_in
    click_on 'Add Todo'
    fill_in 'Title', with: "Buy Milk"
    click_on 'Submit'

    expect(page).to have_css '.todos li', text: "Buy Milk"
  end
end

the expected failure is

NoMethodError:
       undefined method `authenticate' for #<TodosController:0x0000558b68573f48>

but before_filter gives...

ActionView::Template::Error:
       undefined method `each' for nil:NilClass

That is, somehow the hook runs without error and but the controller goes to view with a @todos uninitialized Better save time, use non deprecated codes...

-4

To figure out what is the difference between before_action and before_filter, we should understand the difference between action and filter.

An action is a method of a controller to which you can route to. For example, your user creation page might be routed to UsersController#new - new is the action in this route.

Filters run in respect to controller actions - before, after or around them. These methods can halt the action processing by redirecting or set up common data to every action in the controller.

Rails 4 –> _action

Rails 3 –> _filter

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