Object.update_attribute(:only_one_field, "Some Value")
Object.update_attributes(:field1 => "value", :field2 => "value2", :field3 => "value3")
Both of these will update an object without having to explicitly tell AR to update.
Rails API says:
for update_attribute
Updates a single attribute and saves the record without going through the normal validation procedure. This is especially useful for boolean flags on existing records. The regular update_attribute method in Base is replaced with this when the validations module is mixed in, which it is by default.
for update_attributes
Updates all the attributes from the passed-in Hash and saves the record. If the object is invalid, the saving will fail and false will be returned.
So if I don't want to have the object validated I should use update_attribute. What if I have this update on a before_save, will it stackoverflow?
My question is does update_attribute also bypass the before save or just the validation.
Also, what is the correct syntax to pass a hash to update_attributes... check out my example at the top.
update_attribute
statement inside abefore_save
callback? I can't think of a good reason for this. – Daniel Pietzsch May 6 '10 at 5:54before_save
callback). F.e. instead ofupdate_attribute(:discount, 0.1) if amount > 100
you could dodiscount = 0.1 if amount > 100
.update_attribute
callssave
on the object, which is unnecessary in this case, since the statement is inside abefore_save
callback and will get saved anyway. I hope that makes sense. – Daniel Pietzsch May 7 '10 at 3:19