thanks in advance.
Mysql doesn't have an actual boolean type so rails usually uses tinyint
(1) columns instead. There is a setting inside the mysql_adapter
called emulate_booleans which you could try turning off but that would
apply to all tables.
Fred
As others have pointed out, MySQL doesn't have a straight "boolean"
field type, so the tinyint(1) hack is used instead.
You'll either need to turn off emulate_booleans (which may break other
stuff) or just change the column type, as the MySQL adapter will
detect the current type as :boolean and the AR-generated accessors
will wind up casting values as booleans automatically...
Not to mention the potential for confusion - imagine you're another
developer, looking at schema.rb. You see a field 'foo' declared
as :boolean, and the interface stuffs '2' in there - what's it
supposed to mean? FILE_NOT_FOUND? :)
--Matt Jones
Jeff
On Jan 9, 6:16 pm, codeinnova <sumangur...@gmail.com> wrote:
> So i had a boolean attribute in my model which gets interpreted to
> tinyint(1) in mysql by rails migrations. Now tinyint(1) accepts a
> range in mysql and i want to change my boolean attribute to an
> attribute which can accept 3 values(0,1,2).
> I made the change to the view and when i post the form selecting the
> selecting the value '2', it still gets saved as a '0'. I checked the
> params when the post is done and the value of the form element was '0'
> even though i selected '2'(I am using a dropdown list here).
> So my question really is, how can i make rails to accept more values
> without changing the type to something other than tinyint(1)? And why
> this weirdness?As others have pointed out, MySQL doesn't have a straight "boolean"
field type, so the tinyint(1) hack is used instead.You'll either need to turn off emulate_booleans (which may break other
stuff) or just change the column type, as the MySQL adapter will
detect the current type as :boolean and the AR-generated accessors
will wind up casting values as booleans automatically...