Represents the schema of an SQL table in an abstract way. This class provides methods for manipulating the schema representation.
Inside migration files, the t
object in create_table is
actually of this type:
class SomeMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def up
create_table :foo do |t|
puts t.class # => "ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::TableDefinition"
end
end
def down
...
end
end
- #
- B
- C
- I
- N
- R
- T
[R] | as | |
[R] | comment | |
[R] | foreign_keys | |
[RW] | indexes | |
[R] | name | |
[R] | options | |
[R] | temporary |
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_definitions.rb, line 219 def initialize(name, temporary = false, options = nil, as = nil, comment: nil) @columns_hash = {} @indexes = [] @foreign_keys = [] @primary_keys = nil @temporary = temporary @options = options @as = as @name = name @comment = comment end
Returns a ColumnDefinition for the column with name name
.
Instantiates a new column for the table. See connection.add_column for available options.
Additional options are:
-
:index
- Create an index for the column. Can be eithertrue
or an options hash.
This method returns self
.
Examples
# Assuming +td+ is an instance of TableDefinition
td.column(:granted, :boolean, index: true)
Short-hand examples
Instead of calling column directly, you can also work with the short-hand definitions for the default types. They use the type as the method name instead of as a parameter and allow for multiple columns to be defined in a single statement.
What can be written like this with the regular calls to column:
create_table :products do |t|
t.column :shop_id, :integer
t.column :creator_id, :integer
t.column :item_number, :string
t.column :name, :string, default: "Untitled"
t.column :value, :string, default: "Untitled"
t.column :created_at, :datetime
t.column :updated_at, :datetime
end
add_index :products, :item_number
can also be written as follows using the short-hand:
create_table :products do |t|
t.integer :shop_id, :creator_id
t.string :item_number, index: true
t.string :name, :value, default: "Untitled"
t.timestamps null: false
end
There's a short-hand method for each of the type values declared at the
top. And then there's #timestamps that'll
add created_at
and updated_at
as datetimes.
#references will add
an appropriately-named _id column, plus a corresponding _type column if the
:polymorphic
option is supplied. If :polymorphic
is a hash of options, these will be used when creating the
_type
column. The :index
option will also create
an index, similar to calling add_index. So what can
be written like this:
create_table :taggings do |t|
t.integer :tag_id, :tagger_id, :taggable_id
t.string :tagger_type
t.string :taggable_type, default: 'Photo'
end
add_index :taggings, :tag_id, name: 'index_taggings_on_tag_id'
add_index :taggings, [:tagger_id, :tagger_type]
Can also be written as follows using references:
create_table :taggings do |t|
t.references :tag, index: { name: 'index_taggings_on_tag_id' }
t.references :tagger, polymorphic: true, index: true
t.references :taggable, polymorphic: { default: 'Photo' }
end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_definitions.rb, line 311 def column(name, type, options = {}) name = name.to_s type = type.to_sym if type options = options.dup if @columns_hash[name] && @columns_hash[name].primary_key? raise ArgumentError, "you can't redefine the primary key column '#{name}'. To define a custom primary key, pass { id: false } to create_table." end index_options = options.delete(:index) index(name, index_options.is_a?(Hash) ? index_options : {}) if index_options @columns_hash[name] = new_column_definition(name, type, options) self end
Returns an array of ColumnDefinition objects for the columns of the table.
Adds index options to the indexes hash, keyed by column name This is primarily used to track indexes that need to be created after the table
index(:account_id, name: 'index_projects_on_account_id')
Adds a reference.
t.references(:user)
t.belongs_to(:supplier, foreign_key: true)
See connection.add_reference for details of the options you can use.
remove the column name
from the table.
remove_column(:account_id)
Appends :datetime
columns :created_at
and
:updated_at
to the table. See connection.add_timestamps
t.timestamps null: false