Is there any way I can validate a single attribute in ActiveRecord?
Something like:
ac_object.valid?(attribute_name)
Sometimes there are validations that are quite expensive (e.g. validations that need to perform database queries). In that case you need to avoid using valid?
because it simply does a lot more than you need.
There is an alternative solution. You can use the validators_on
method of ActiveModel::Validations
.
validators_on(*attributes) public
List all validators that are being used to validate a specific attribute.
according to which you can manually validate for the attributes you want
e.g. we only want to validate the title
of Post
:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :body, caps_off: true
validates :body, no_swearing: true
validates :body, spell_check_ok: true
validates presence_of: :title
validates length_of: :title, minimum: 30
end
Where no_swearing
and spell_check_ok
are complex methods that are extremely expensive.
We can do the following:
def validate_title(a_title)
Post.validators_on(:title).each do |validator|
validator.validate_each(self, :title, a_title)
end
end
which will validate only the title attribute without invoking any other validations.
p = Post.new
p.validate_title("")
p.errors.messages
#=> {:title => ["title can not be empty"]
I am not completely confident that we are supposed to use validators_on
safely so I would consider handling an exception in a sane way in validates_title
.
self.class.validators_on
and taking the attribute name as parameter makes it more reusable.
Commented
Sep 13, 2017 at 9:45
You can implement your own method in your model. Something like this
def valid_attribute?(attribute_name)
self.valid?
self.errors[attribute_name].blank?
end
Or add it to ActiveRecord::Base
I wound up building on @xlembouras's answer and added this method to my ApplicationRecord
:
class ApplicationRecord < ActiveRecord::Base
self.abstract_class = true
def valid_attributes?(*attributes)
attributes.each do |attribute|
self.class.validators_on(attribute).each do |validator|
validator.validate_each(self, attribute, send(attribute))
end
end
errors.none?
end
end
Then I can do stuff like this in a controller:
if @post.valid_attributes?(:title, :date)
render :post_preview
else
render :new
end
errors.none?
may refer to other errors (e.g. if this function ran for different attributes previously). Possible improvements: if you only care about a boolean flag and not the actual errors you may consider returning in the the loop as: return false unless self.errors[attribute].blank?
. I think self[attribute]
is nicer than send(attribute)
but that's only personal preference. Also you may extract it to a concern rather than having it in a parent class (again, preferences).
Commented
Sep 13, 2017 at 9:51
errors
before calling none?
: errors.slice(*attributes).none?
. This isn't how ActiveModel::Validations tends to handle things though. // For what it's worth, accessing attributes with []
is not the same as using send
. The latter will call the accessor method, which is what you want 99/100. Also, short-circuiting means not all errors are available for the view to render. That's probably not desirable.
Commented
Sep 13, 2017 at 15:17
Building on @coreyward's answer, I also added a validate_attributes!
method:
class ApplicationRecord < ActiveRecord::Base
self.abstract_class = true
def valid_attributes?(*attributes)
attributes.each do |attribute|
self.class.validators_on(attribute).each do |validator|
validator.validate_each(self, attribute, send(attribute))
end
end
errors.none?
end
def validate_attributes!(*attributes)
valid_attributes?(*attributes) || raise(ActiveModel::ValidationError.new(self))
end
end
I had problems with other solutions due to validator.validate_each
being a private method.
Here's a snippet that's working under Rails 6:
class ApplicationRecord < ActiveRecord::Base
self.abstract_class = true
def valid_attributes?(*attributes)
attributes.each do |attribute|
self.class.validators_on(attribute).each do |validator|
validator.validate(self)
end
end
errors.none?
end
end
validator.validate(self)
over ...validate_each
is that it will take allow_nil
and allow_blank
options into account. github.com/rails/rails/blob/…
Commented
May 30, 2023 at 9:28
validate
is that it may validate fields outside or your scope. Example: validates :email, :first_name, presence: true
and call valid_attributes?(:email)
, this will then also validate first_name
.
Commented
May 30, 2023 at 9:41