I have updated the documentation according to ticket #4263 about fixtures and set_fixture_class

Signed-off-by: José Valim <jose.valim@gmail.com>
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Franck Verrot 2010-04-08 18:05:12 +02:00 committed by José Valim
parent d61dbce482
commit 621ee373cb
1 changed files with 9 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -104,6 +104,14 @@ class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
set_table_name "PRODUCT"
end
</ruby>
If you do so, you will have to define manually the class name that is hosting the fixtures (class_name.yml) using the +set_fixture_class+ method in your test definition:
<ruby>
class FunnyJoke < ActiveSupport::TestCase
set_fixture_class :funny_jokes => 'Joke'
fixtures :funny_jokes
...
end
</ruby>
It's also possible to override the column that should be used as the table's primary key. Use the +ActiveRecord::Base.set_primary_key+ method for that:
<ruby>
@ -201,4 +209,4 @@ Active Record callbacks allow you to attach code to certain events in the life-c
h3. Migrations
Rails provides a domain-specific language for managing a database schema called migrations. Migrations are stored in files which are executed against any database that Active Record support using rake. Rails keeps track of which files have been committed to the database and provides rollback features. You can learn more about migrations in the "Active Record Migrations guide":migrations.html
Rails provides a domain-specific language for managing a database schema called migrations. Migrations are stored in files which are executed against any database that Active Record support using rake. Rails keeps track of which files have been committed to the database and provides rollback features. You can learn more about migrations in the "Active Record Migrations guide":migrations.html