I need to change my column type from date to datetime for an app I am making. I don't care about the data as its still being developed.
How can I do this?
First in your terminal:
rails g migration change_date_format_in_my_table
Then in your migration file:
For Rails >= 3.2:
class ChangeDateFormatInMyTable < ActiveRecord::Migration
def up
change_column :my_table, :my_column, :datetime
end
def down
change_column :my_table, :my_column, :date
end
end
change
method isn't used instead of the up
and down
methods, it's because the change
method doesn't support the change_column
migration definition.
Also, if you're using Rails 3 or newer you don't have to use the up
and down
methods. You can just use change
:
class ChangeFormatInMyTable < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
change_column :my_table, :my_column, :my_new_type
end
end
This migration uses change_column, which is not automatically reversible.
To make the migration reversible you can either:
1. Define #up and #down methods in place of the #change method.
2. Use the #reversible method to define reversible behavior.
In Rails 3.2 and Rails 4, Benjamin's popular answer has a slightly different syntax.
First in your terminal:
$ rails g migration change_date_format_in_my_table
Then in your migration file:
class ChangeDateFormatInMyTable < ActiveRecord::Migration
def up
change_column :my_table, :my_column, :datetime
end
def down
change_column :my_table, :my_column, :date
end
end
There's a change_column method, just execute it in your migration with datetime as a new type.
change_column(:my_table, :my_column, :my_new_type)
rake db:rollback
.
Sep 20, 2022 at 1:21
AFAIK, migrations are there to try to reshape data you care about (i.e. production) when making schema changes. So unless that's wrong, and since he did say he does not care about the data, why not just modify the column type in the original migration from date to datetime and re-run the migration? (Hope you've got tests:)).
rake db:migrate:reset
is for.
Feb 6, 2016 at 0:03