In testing a getter/setter pair in a rails model, I've found a good example of behavior I've always thought was odd and inconsistent.
In this example I'm dealing with class Folder < ActiveRecord::Base
.
Folder belongs_to :parent, :class_name => 'Folder'
On the getter method, if I use:
def parent_name
parent.name
end
...or...
def parent_name
self.parent.name
end
...the result is exactly the same, I get the name of the parent folder. However, in the getter method if I use...
def parent_name=(name)
parent = self.class.find_by_name(name)
end
... parent becomes nil, but if I use...
def parent_name=(name)
self.parent = self.class.find_by_name(name)
end
...then then it works.
So, my question is, why do you need to declare self.method sometimes and why can you just use a local variable?
It seems the need for / use of self
in ActiveRecord is inconsistent, and I'd like to understand this better so I don't feel like I'm always guessing whether I need to declare self or not. When should you / should you not use self in ActiveRecord models?
self.
qualification within the class?, Calling attribute accessor methods from within the class, When to useself
in Ruby, local methods act differently when called with/withoutself
. Why?, In Ruby, when should you useself.
in your classes?, In Ruby, if we define a method calledc=
, why can't it be invoked byc = 3
?.