class RefinerySetting < ActiveRecord::Base validates_presence_of :name serialize :value # stores into YAML format # Number of settings to show per page when using will_paginate def self.per_page 10 end # prettier version of the name. # site_name becomes Site Name def title self.name.titleize end # Access method that allows dot notation to work. # Say you had a setting called "site_name". You could access that by going RefinerySetting[:site_name] # but with this you can also access that by going RefinerySettting.site_name def self.method_missing(method, *args) method_name = method.to_s super(method, *args) rescue NoMethodError if method_name =~ /=$/ self[method_name.gsub('=', '')] = args.first else self[method_name] end end def self.find_or_set(name, the_value) find_or_create_by_name(:name => name.to_s, :value => the_value).value end def self.[](name) setting = self.find_by_name(name.to_s) setting.value unless setting.nil? end def self.[]=(name, value) setting = find_or_create_by_name(name.to_s) setting.value = value setting.save end # Below is not very nice, but seems to be required # The problem is when Rails serialises a fields like booleans # it doesn't retreieve it back out as a boolean # it just returns a string. This code maps the two boolean # values correctly so a boolean is returned REPLACEMENTS = {"true" => true, "false" => false} def value if (current_value = self[:value]).present? # This bit handles true and false so that true and false are actually returned # not "0" and "1" REPLACEMENTS.each do |current, new_value| current_value = new_value if current_value == current end # converts the serialised value back to an integer # if the value is an integer begin if current_value.to_i.to_s == current_value current_value = current_value.to_i end rescue current_value end end return current_value end def value=(new_value) # must convert to string if true or false supplied otherwise it becomes 0 or 1, unfortunately. new_value = new_value.to_s if ["trueclass","falseclass"].include?(new_value.class.to_s.downcase) self[:value] = new_value end end