A long-lived project that still receives updates
Enumerations for Ruby with some magic powers!
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EnumerateIt

Enumerations for Ruby with some magic powers! 🎩

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EnumerateIt helps you to declare and use enumerations in a very simple and flexible way.

Why would I want a gem if Rails already has native enumerations support?

Firstly, although EnumerateIt works well with Rails, it isn't required! It means you can add it to any Ruby project! Secondly, you can define your enumerations in classes, so you can add behaviour and also reuse them! 😀


Table of Contents

  • EnumerateIt
    • Why would I want a gem if Rails already has native enumerations support?
    • Table of Contents
    • Installation
    • Using with Rails
    • Creating enumerations
      • Sorting enumerations
    • Using enumerations
    • FAQ
      • Why define enumerations outside the class that uses them?
      • Can I use enumerate_it gem without Rails?
      • What versions of Ruby and Rails are supported?
      • Can I set a value to always be at the end of a sorted list?
    • I18n
      • Translate a name-spaced enumeration
    • Handling a legacy database
    • Changelog
    • Note on Patches/Pull Requests
    • Copyright

Installation

gem install enumerate_it

Using with Rails

Add the gem to your Gemfile:

gem 'enumerate_it'

You can use a Rails generator to create both an enumeration and its locale file:

rails generate enumerate_it:enum --help

Creating enumerations

Enumerations are created as classes and you should put them inside app/enumerations folder.

You can pass an array of symbols, so that the respective value for each symbol will be the stringified version of the symbol itself:

class RelationshipStatus < EnumerateIt::Base
  associate_values(
    :single,
    :married,
    :divorced
  )
end

This will create some nice stuff:

  • Each enumeration's value will turn into a constant:

    RelationshipStatus::SINGLE
    #=> 'single'
    
    RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
    #=> 'married'
  • You can retrieve a list with all the enumeration codes:

    RelationshipStatus.list
    #=> ['divorced', 'married', 'single']
  • You can retrieve a JSON with all the enumeration codes:

    RelationshipStatus.to_json
    #=> "[{\"value\":\"divorced\",\"label\":\"Divorced\"},{\"value\":\"married\", ...
  • You can get an array of options, ready to use with the select, select_tag, etc. family of Rails helpers.

    RelationshipStatus.to_a
    #=> [['Divorced', 'divorced'], ['Married', 'married'], ['Single', 'single']]
  • You can retrieve a list with values for a group of enumeration constants.

    RelationshipStatus.values_for %w(MARRIED SINGLE)
    #=> ['married', 'single']
  • You can retrieve the value for a specific enumeration constant:

    RelationshipStatus.value_for('MARRIED')
    #=> 'married'
  • You can retrieve the symbol used to declare a specific enumeration value:

    RelationshipStatus.key_for(RelationshipStatus::MARRIED)
    #=> :married
  • You can iterate over the list of the enumeration's values:

    RelationshipStatus.each_value { |value| ... }
  • You can iterate over the list of the enumeration's translations:

    RelationshipStatus.each_translation { |translation| ... }
  • You can also retrieve all the translations of the enumeration:

    RelationshipStatus.translations
  • You can ask for the enumeration's length:

    RelationshipStatus.length
    #=> 3

Sorting enumerations

When calling methods like to_a, to_json and list, the returned values will be sorted by default in the same order passed to associate_values call.

However, if you want to overwrite the default sort mode, you can use the sort_by class method:

class RelationshipStatus < EnumerateIt::Base
  associate_values :single, :married

  sort_by :translation
end

The sort_by method accepts one of the following values:

Value Behavior
:none The default behavior, will return values in order that was passed to associate_values call
:name Will sort the returned values based on the name of each enumeration option
:translation will sort the returned values based on their translations
:value See Handling a legacy database section for more details

Using enumerations

The cool part is that you can use these enumerations with any class:

# ActiveRecord instance
class Person < ApplicationRecord
  has_enumeration_for :relationship_status
end
# Non-ActiveRecord instance
class Person
  extend EnumerateIt
  attr_accessor :relationship_status

  has_enumeration_for :relationship_status
end

Note: EnumerateIt will try to load an enumeration class based on the camelized attribute name. If you have a different name, you can specify it by using the with option:

has_enumeration_for :relationship_status, with: RelationshipStatus

This will create:

  • A "humanized" version of the hash's key to humanize the attribute's value:

    p = Person.new
    p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::DIVORCED
    p.relationship_status_humanize
    #=> 'Divorced'
  • A translation for your options, if you include a locale to represent it (see more in the I18n section).

    p = Person.new
    p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::DIVORCED
    p.relationship_status_humanize
    #=> 'Divorciado'
  • The associated enumerations, which can be retrieved with the enumerations class method:

    Person.enumerations
    #=> { relationship_status: RelationshipStatus }
  • A helper method for each enumeration option, if you pass the create_helpers option as true:

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status, with: RelationshipStatus, create_helpers: true
    end
    
    p = Person.new
    p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
    
    p.married?
    #=> true
    
    p.divorced?
    #=> false

    It's also possible to "namespace" the created helper methods, passing a hash to the create_helpers option. This can be useful when two or more of the enumerations used share the same constants:

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status,
        with: RelationshipStatus, create_helpers: { prefix: true }
    end
    
    p = Person.new
    p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
    
    p.relationship_status_married?
    #=> true
    
    p.relationship_status_divorced?
    #=> false

    You can define polymorphic behavior for the enumeration values, so you can define a class for each of them:

    class RelationshipStatus < EnumerateIt::Base
      associate_values :married, :single
    
      class Married
        def saturday_night
          'At home with the kids'
        end
      end
    
      class Single
        def saturday_night
          'Party hard!'
        end
      end
    end
    
    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status,
        with: RelationshipStatus, create_helpers: { polymorphic: true }
    end
    
    p = Person.new
    p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
    p.relationship_status_object.saturday_night
    #=> 'At home with the kids'
    
    p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::SINGLE
    p.relationship_status_object.saturday_night
    #=> 'Party hard!'

    You can also change the suffix _object, using the suffix option:

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status,
        with: RelationshipStatus, create_helpers: { polymorphic: { suffix: '_mode' } }
    end
    
    p.relationship_status_mode.saturday_night

    The create_helpers also creates some mutator helper methods, that can be used to change the attribute's value.

    p = Person.new
    p.married!
    
    p.married?
    #=> true
  • A scope method for each enumeration option if you pass the create_scopes option as true:

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status, with: RelationshipStatus, create_scopes: true
    end
    
    Person.married.to_sql
    #=> SELECT "users".* FROM "users" WHERE "users"."relationship_status" = "married"

    The :create_scopes also accepts prefix option.

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status,
        with: RelationshipStatus, create_scopes: { prefix: true }
    end
    
    Person.relationship_status_married.to_sql
  • An inclusion validation (if your class can manage validations and responds to validates_inclusion_of):

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status, with: RelationshipStatus
    end
    
    p = Person.new(relationship_status: 'invalid')
    p.valid?
    #=> false
    p.errors[:relationship_status]
    #=> 'is not included in the list'
  • A presence validation (if your class can manage validations and responds to validates_presence_of and you pass the required options as true):

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status, required: true
    end
    
    p = Person.new relationship_status: nil
    p.valid?
    #=> false
    p.errors[:relationship_status]
    #=> "can't be blank"

    If you pass the skip_validation option as true, it will not create any validations:

    class Person < ApplicationRecord
      has_enumeration_for :relationship_status, with: RelationshipStatus, skip_validation: true
    end
    
    p = Person.new(relationship_status: 'invalid')
    p.valid?
    #=> true

Remember that you can add validations to any kind of class and not only ActiveRecord ones.

FAQ

Why define enumerations outside the class that uses them?

  • It's clearer.
  • You can add behaviour to the enumeration class.
  • You can reuse the enumeration inside other classes.

Can I use enumerate_it gem without Rails?

You sure can! 😄

What versions of Ruby and Rails are supported?

  • Ruby: 3.0+
  • Rails 6.0+

All versions are tested via GitHub Actions.

Can I set a value to always be at the end of a sorted list?

Yes, see more details here.

I18n

I18n lookup is provided on both _humanized and Enumeration#to_a methods, given the hash key is a Symbol. The I18n strings are located on enumerations.<enumeration_name>.<key>:

# Your locale file
pt-BR:
  enumerations:
    relationship_status:
      married: Casado
class RelationshipStatus < EnumerateIt::Base
  associate_values(
    :married,
    :single
  )
end

p = Person.new
p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
p.relationship_status_humanize # Existent key
#=> 'Casado'

p.relationship_status = RelationshipStatus::SINGLE
p.relationship_status_humanize # Non-existent key
#=> 'Single'

You can also translate specific values:

status = RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
RelationshipStatus.t(status)
#=> 'Casado'

Translate a name-spaced enumeration

In order to translate an enumeration in a specific namespace (say Design::Color), you can add the following:

pt-BR:
  enumerations:
    "design/color":
      blue: Azul
      red: Vermelho

Handling a legacy database

EnumerateIt can help you build a Rails application around a legacy database which was filled with those small and unchangeable tables used to create foreign key constraints everywhere, like the following example:

Table "public.relationship_status"

  Column     |     Type      | Modifiers
-------------+---------------+-----------
 code        | character(1)  | not null
 description | character(11) |

Indexes:
  "relationship_status_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (code)

SELECT * FROM relationship_status;

code |  description
---- +--------------
1    | Single
2    | Married
3    | Divorced

You might also have something like a users table with a relationship_status column and a foreign key pointing to the relationship_status table.

While this is a good thing from the database normalization perspective, managing these values in tests is very hard. Doing database joins just to get the description of some value is absurd. And, more than this, referencing them in the code using magic numbers was terrible and meaningless: what does it mean when we say that someone or something is 2?

To solve this, you can pass a hash to your enumeration values:

class RelationshipStatus < EnumerateIt::Base
  associate_values(
    single:   1,
    married:  2,
    divorced: 3
  )
end
RelationshipStatus::MARRIED
#=> 2

You can also sort it by its value using sort_by :value.

Changelog

Changes follows the Semantic Versioning specification and you can see them on the releases page.

Note on Patches/Pull Requests

  • Fork the project.
  • Make your feature addition or bug fix.
  • Add tests for it. This is important so we don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
  • [Optional] Run the tests against a specific Gemfile: $ bundle exec appraisal rails_7.0 rake spec.
  • Run the tests against all supported versions: $ bundle exec rake (or $ bundle exec wwtd)
  • Commit, but please do not mess with Rakefile, version, or history.
  • Send a Pull Request. Bonus points for topic branches.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2010-2024 Cássio Marques and Lucas Caton. See LICENSE file for details.