Tempted to reply to Wayne's question with an answer that simply says "no" & nothing else :)
the other part of me wants to pull out my c & assembly books to compare against the source in sort...but I can't even write tests regularly, so probably need to spend more time with them (I was told ruby can pull in faster libraries from them)
I have been stuck in this problem for the past two days. This webmock stub request is not working while running the test. Here is the controller.
class AdvisorDashboardController < ApplicationController
load_and_authorize_resource :class => AdvisorDashboardController
require 'Numeric.rb'
i...
@GaneshKumar ... I'm too new to rspec to help & never done webmock ... have you searched the github & official documentation for rspec & webmock yet? Your other option is isolated by removing everything extra.
@thageekboy ...odd, did the normal `@store = Store.where(params[:<whateverKey>]) not work? Normally it's a matter of just digging thru to grab the key from the activerecord in the controller & then normal array operations after ... but I can definitely see using the grab like that if you're only using that one entry...
Ok from your original post today ...your issue is you weren't using the key you setup & skipping to the :user_id before you did :key ... @store = Store.where(key:params[:key]), it fails because you have key:params[:key] ... you just stuck the user_id into the key named "key" .... the next line down should be User.find(@store[:key][:user_id]) ... I only bring this up as [0][:user_id]is brittle, where as [:key][:user_id] is less
@thageekboy I'd be tempted to keep it with the [:key][:user_id] as they will always seek it out where as the other two options will become complicated as the code base changes
@Mirv As for this, you're a bit off, all i did was use the key column to find the record instead of id, because the controller will recieve a key.. assume its an API key
Hahaha well i am learning rails while building an app... although i am past the frustrations now.. This room comes to my aid when i am stuck... Thank stackoverflow! I am an ex-php coder
@thageekboy ....small question....if all you want is the ID, why not just pluck it which is WAY faster & returns single entry so you don't have to jump around with array?
sorry - not pluck - but I know there's a way of not using an array for a single object like what you're doing
@thageekboy assuming you have ActiveRecord relations setup and users have one store you could do something like User.joins(:store).where("stores.key = ?", params[:key]).first
@thageekboy Do you have a has_many or has_many through relationship between store & user? if so ... @user = @store.user, to make it an object @user = User.find(@store.user)
The joins query make it so it is a single query to the database. It would be more noticeable performance wise if they were complex queries, but still is better to do one than many if possible.
i agree with jared on the join being fastest - but if you can single line it (@store already exists), rails will write the query for you much better than we can
i hate AR...I know all the arguments for it & have never seen any of the supposed benefits which would out weight 3.5 months of trouble shooting around it's magic in the past 6 months....
find_by is probably not deprecate - stackoverflow.com/questions/32792326/is-rails-find-deprecated - I also checked the rails api & nothing mentioned there either...incidently .where is favored over find_by, but find seems to be ok for single returns (which as far as I understand is what you're doing)
I have a question which might be more discussion-y than is usually allowed on the main bit of stackoverflow so I'll ask here
I'm making a chat application in rails. Is it advisable to use Jobs to handle creating/deleting messages etc.?
it might make the app quicker, but also it pulls out some of the code that perhaps should be in the controllers and puts that code into the Job instead
but i see no issue with a service object having all the code & controller calling it & then a wrapper class in jobs extending that same code if you're doing both
It doesn't work for everyone, but basically the maker of rails says, when in question - spin off a new controller & allow the built in CRUD to save you time initially...as in the long run it's easier to understand than some new guy getting used to your custom service objects
@Mirv Thanks for the link. I look forward to reading it.
When I left work last night, I figured out a clever hack to fix this bug. Got to work this morning, started writing a test for the clever hack, and realized that all I really need to do is to delete one line of code. Yay for tests!
yw Wayne .... question of my own....I've got this gravatar thing....when I'm testing it should i just test that the link works or that the image loads? I don't want to use capybara on this project, so just looking to use assertions....thoughts?
VCR does not run a headless browser. It hooks into Ruby's library to intercept HTTP traffic, allowing recording and replay of external traffic. I've used it, it's good.
No, it just captures any HTTP request and saves the whole response in a 'cassette' (just a yml file) and replays from that yml whenever you run your test suite
The other thing you can do is to hide the external entity behind a library that you can mock in your tests. Prevent your tests from ever talking to anything. Usually you would then have a separate test for the library, possibly using VCR.
For a test that does not involve a headless browser, the best you can do is test that the HTML got emitted. Otherwise, your test will need to use a headless browser.
so basically assert_match <html_tag> <"name of class for gravatar"> type?
There's a helper setup which does call_gravatar unless user.nil?, then call gravatar outputs the <h5>User: <%= user %> next line is gravatar_for .... next line is some closing of the html
so theoretically if everything from my input is good & gravatar service working - all I do is test the <h5> with an added class to make simpler for testing
Yeah, something like that assert_match. That will tightly couple the test to the HTML, so I might create another helper method called, e.g., loads_gravatar?. Put that method right next to the garvatar_for function so that they live together: Because if one changes, the other will have to. Then have the test call loads_gravatar? to check the page.
random question - i've read like 50+ articles on where things go...so I've narrowed down the location of a view partial called _gravatar to either 'shared' or 'layouts' ... i'm leaning towards shared...any thoughts?
I usually put partials in the view directory for the thing they are associated with. For example, let's say I have a "profile" page, but another controller needs to display a profile inline. I will create a _profile partial, in views/profile, and then have the other controller render it using "profile/profile".
For partials that aren't associated with anything, then "shared" is good.
should i let rails pages error & rescue completely so there utter failure or should i (without messing with errors/rescue) include if statements that just don't display the broken part of a page layout?
Do error handling at the highest level you can stand.
If you can stand to just let the exception happen, do that. If you can't stand that, but can stand to rescue it at the highest level and, for example, display a custom "oops" page, do that.
But that doesn't work for multi element arrays. I know the arrays will be 2 elements long. For example: [[[:a, :a1],[:b, :b1]],[[:c, :c1],[:d, :d1]]] to [[:a, :a1],[:b, :b1],[:c, :c1],[:d, :d1]]
I've got this working controller test suite....right? Well I broke it just copying and pasting over to the other controller to use....it's like the new broken test suite infected the older working one!?!
i'm doing it smart....I undid all commands to the working test suite (recipes) & made sure not to save any changes, looking at github repo for diffs & restarting the workspace first
Ok, don't laugh too hard .... this is how I got around the nil errors & avoided having to mock the gravatar .... <% if user?(recipe.user) %> <%= render partial: 'shared/gravatar_section', locals: {user: recipe.user} %> <% end %>
(I am going to be doing this everytime I get a template error for this project I'm helping this guy get going)
Follow up question .... would you guys consider moving those 3 lines in a helper? I'm typing recipe.user twice
Unrelated question .... when you guys take information in .... do you create a method in the controller to downcase all the params or capitolize .... or do you do this in the model & if so....would you do this by using a before_commit or save? I've never done datashaping in the model
If a model has an attribute that needs to be, e.g., capitalized, I make the model validate that, and perhaps ensure it.
What I do is to imagine that I am working with a very bad programmer who will find every possible way to code a bug. If the attribute must be capitalized and I do it in the controller, my idiot co-worker will surely create a new controller method that does not capitalize the attribute.
ok, so the test is a good call - i don't know that it would break anything, but looks sloppy - so when I make the validation, as an extra ease of use....how would i then change the data before it hits the db? before_commit on model?
In a Rails model, if I have a field that is for proper names, what is the best practice way to ensure they are uniformly capitalized despite potentially lazy input from users?
IE let's say the model is Contact and the field is Name. No matter what the user inputs I want the words to be capitaliz...
There's a difference between googling something yourself and when someone else googles it: That someone else kind of knows what they are looking for, and can reject search results that are stupid.
...always wanted to sit down at the interview where they ask how would you solve a problem you didn't know the answer too & say, "First of all, those don't exist & secondly, 'google'" .... then if they ask me to elaborate answer them in the genie voice, "That answer is faaaaAAAAaaaar beyond your power of comprehension"
Ok, second part of the helper wrapping....I've got this gravatar_for helper (in application_helper)..., it goes on a partial with 20 lines of html, then I call a method in recipe_helper from the view that returns "Obj is nil" or render's the partial....is that not the definition of codesmell?
I would try to make a single partial that includes the gravatar. That partial would call a helper gravatar_available? that checked to see if the gravatar was available. Everything includes that partial; that partial always calls the helper.
I've got two different sets of requirements about how they are arranged in the layout of the partial and what information is being shown (for use of gravatar_for). So two partials off the main display seems about right...alternatively, I could do a bunch of if statements (like 6) with the shared stuff on there too....this idea is less appealing to me - especially since it's in ERB (messy) & not slim or haml