I\'m trying to overwrite a getter method for an ActiveRecord model. I have an attribute called name in the model Category, and I\'d like to be able
You can use Rails read_attribute method. Rails docs
I would like to add another option for overwriting getter method, which is simply :super.
def name
name_trans || super
end
this works not just on attributes getter method, but also associations getter methods, too。
Overriding the getter and using read_attribute does not work for associations, but you can use alias_method_chain instead.
def name_with_override
name_trans || name_without_override
end
alias_method_chain :name, :override
If someone want update the value after name_trans in getter method, you could use self[:name]=.
def name
self[:name] = name_trans || self[:name]
# don't do this, it will cause endless loop
# update(name: name_trans)
end
Update: The preferred method according to the Rails Style Guide is to use self[:name] instead of read_attribute and write_attribute. I would encourage you to skip my answer and instead prefer this one.
You can do it exactly like that, except that you need to use read_attribute to actually fetch the value of the name attribute and avoid the recursive call to the name method:
def name
name_trans || read_attribute(:name)
end
If you using store attributes like this
store :settings, accessors: [:volume_adjustment]
or
using gems like
hstore_accessor gem link
So you ended up using store method on model, then to override those method you can't use self.read_attribute, you must use instead super like that:
def partner_percentage
super.to_i || 10
end