* Deprecate marshalling load from legacy attributes format. *Ryuta Kamizono* * `*_previously_changed?` accepts `:from` and `:to` keyword arguments like `*_changed?`. topic.update!(status: :archived) topic.status_previously_changed?(from: "active", to: "archived") # => true *George Claghorn* * Raise FrozenError when trying to write attributes that aren't backed by the database on an object that is frozen: class Animal include ActiveModel::Attributes attribute :age end animal = Animal.new animal.freeze animal.age = 25 # => FrozenError, "can't modify a frozen Animal" *Josh Brody* * Add `*_previously_was` attribute methods when dirty tracking. Example: pirate.update(catchphrase: "Ahoy!") pirate.previous_changes["catchphrase"] # => ["Thar She Blows!", "Ahoy!"] pirate.catchphrase_previously_was # => "Thar She Blows!" *DHH* * Encapsulate each validation error as an Error object. The `ActiveModel`’s `errors` collection is now an array of these Error objects, instead of messages/details hash. For each of these `Error` object, its `message` and `full_message` methods are for generating error messages. Its `details` method would return error’s extra parameters, found in the original `details` hash. The change tries its best at maintaining backward compatibility, however some edge cases won’t be covered, like `errors#first` will return `ActiveModel::Error` and manipulating `errors.messages` and `errors.details` hashes directly will have no effect. Moving forward, please convert those direct manipulations to use provided API methods instead. The list of deprecated methods and their planned future behavioral changes at the next major release are: * `errors#slice!` will be removed. * `errors#each` with the `key, value` two-arguments block will stop working, while the `error` single-argument block would return `Error` object. * `errors#values` will be removed. * `errors#keys` will be removed. * `errors#to_xml` will be removed. * `errors#to_h` will be removed, and can be replaced with `errors#to_hash`. * Manipulating `errors` itself as a hash will have no effect (e.g. `errors[:foo] = 'bar'`). * Manipulating the hash returned by `errors#messages` (e.g. `errors.messages[:foo] = 'bar'`) will have no effect. * Manipulating the hash returned by `errors#details` (e.g. `errors.details[:foo].clear`) will have no effect. *lulalala* Please check [6-0-stable](https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/6-0-stable/activemodel/CHANGELOG.md) for previous changes.