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239 lines
8.1 KiB
Ruby
239 lines
8.1 KiB
Ruby
require "active_support/core_ext/object/deep_dup"
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module ActiveRecord
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# Declare an enum attribute where the values map to integers in the database,
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# but can be queried by name. Example:
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#
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# class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
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# enum status: [ :active, :archived ]
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# end
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#
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# # conversation.update! status: 0
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# conversation.active!
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# conversation.active? # => true
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# conversation.status # => "active"
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#
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# # conversation.update! status: 1
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# conversation.archived!
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# conversation.archived? # => true
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# conversation.status # => "archived"
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#
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# # conversation.status = 1
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# conversation.status = "archived"
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#
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# conversation.status = nil
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# conversation.status.nil? # => true
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# conversation.status # => nil
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#
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# Scopes based on the allowed values of the enum field will be provided
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# as well. With the above example:
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#
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# Conversation.active
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# Conversation.archived
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#
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# Of course, you can also query them directly if the scopes don't fit your
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# needs:
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#
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# Conversation.where(status: [:active, :archived])
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# Conversation.where.not(status: :active)
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#
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# You can set the default value from the database declaration, like:
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#
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# create_table :conversations do |t|
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# t.column :status, :integer, default: 0
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# end
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#
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# Good practice is to let the first declared status be the default.
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#
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# Finally, it's also possible to explicitly map the relation between attribute and
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# database integer with a hash:
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#
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# class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
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# enum status: { active: 0, archived: 1 }
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# end
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#
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# Note that when an array is used, the implicit mapping from the values to database
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# integers is derived from the order the values appear in the array. In the example,
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# <tt>:active</tt> is mapped to +0+ as it's the first element, and <tt>:archived</tt>
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# is mapped to +1+. In general, the +i+-th element is mapped to <tt>i-1</tt> in the
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# database.
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#
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# Therefore, once a value is added to the enum array, its position in the array must
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# be maintained, and new values should only be added to the end of the array. To
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# remove unused values, the explicit hash syntax should be used.
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#
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# In rare circumstances you might need to access the mapping directly.
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# The mappings are exposed through a class method with the pluralized attribute
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# name, which return the mapping in a +HashWithIndifferentAccess+:
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#
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# Conversation.statuses[:active] # => 0
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# Conversation.statuses["archived"] # => 1
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#
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# Use that class method when you need to know the ordinal value of an enum.
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# For example, you can use that when manually building SQL strings:
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#
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# Conversation.where("status <> ?", Conversation.statuses[:archived])
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#
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# You can use the +:_prefix+ or +:_suffix+ options when you need to define
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# multiple enums with same values. If the passed value is +true+, the methods
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# are prefixed/suffixed with the name of the enum. It is also possible to
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# supply a custom value:
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#
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# class Conversation < ActiveRecord::Base
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# enum status: [:active, :archived], _suffix: true
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# enum comments_status: [:active, :inactive], _prefix: :comments
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# end
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#
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# With the above example, the bang and predicate methods along with the
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# associated scopes are now prefixed and/or suffixed accordingly:
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#
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# conversation.active_status!
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# conversation.archived_status? # => false
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#
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# conversation.comments_inactive!
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# conversation.comments_active? # => false
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module Enum
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def self.extended(base) # :nodoc:
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base.class_attribute(:defined_enums, instance_writer: false)
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base.defined_enums = {}
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end
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def inherited(base) # :nodoc:
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base.defined_enums = defined_enums.deep_dup
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super
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end
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class EnumType < Type::Value # :nodoc:
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delegate :type, to: :subtype
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def initialize(name, mapping, subtype)
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@name = name
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@mapping = mapping
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@subtype = subtype
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end
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def cast(value)
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return if value.blank?
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if mapping.has_key?(value)
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value.to_s
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elsif mapping.has_value?(value)
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mapping.key(value)
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else
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assert_valid_value(value)
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end
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end
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def deserialize(value)
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return if value.nil?
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mapping.key(subtype.deserialize(value))
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end
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def serialize(value)
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mapping.fetch(value, value)
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end
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def assert_valid_value(value)
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unless value.blank? || mapping.has_key?(value) || mapping.has_value?(value)
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raise ArgumentError, "'#{value}' is not a valid #{name}"
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end
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end
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# TODO Change this to private once we've dropped Ruby 2.2 support.
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# Workaround for Ruby 2.2 "private attribute?" warning.
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protected
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attr_reader :name, :mapping, :subtype
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end
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def enum(definitions)
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klass = self
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enum_prefix = definitions.delete(:_prefix)
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enum_suffix = definitions.delete(:_suffix)
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definitions.each do |name, values|
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# statuses = { }
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enum_values = ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess.new
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name = name.to_sym
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# def self.statuses() statuses end
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detect_enum_conflict!(name, name.to_s.pluralize, true)
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klass.singleton_class.send(:define_method, name.to_s.pluralize) { enum_values }
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detect_enum_conflict!(name, name)
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detect_enum_conflict!(name, "#{name}=")
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attr = attribute_alias?(name) ? attribute_alias(name) : name
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decorate_attribute_type(attr, :enum) do |subtype|
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EnumType.new(attr, enum_values, subtype)
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end
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_enum_methods_module.module_eval do
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pairs = values.respond_to?(:each_pair) ? values.each_pair : values.each_with_index
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pairs.each do |value, i|
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if enum_prefix == true
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prefix = "#{name}_"
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elsif enum_prefix
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prefix = "#{enum_prefix}_"
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end
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if enum_suffix == true
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suffix = "_#{name}"
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elsif enum_suffix
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suffix = "_#{enum_suffix}"
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end
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value_method_name = "#{prefix}#{value}#{suffix}"
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enum_values[value] = i
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# def active?() status == 0 end
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klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{value_method_name}?")
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define_method("#{value_method_name}?") { self[attr] == value.to_s }
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# def active!() update! status: :active end
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klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, "#{value_method_name}!")
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define_method("#{value_method_name}!") { update!(attr => value) }
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# scope :active, -> { where status: 0 }
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klass.send(:detect_enum_conflict!, name, value_method_name, true)
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klass.scope value_method_name, -> { where(attr => value) }
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end
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end
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defined_enums[name.to_s] = enum_values
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end
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end
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private
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def _enum_methods_module
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@_enum_methods_module ||= begin
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mod = Module.new
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include mod
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mod
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end
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end
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ENUM_CONFLICT_MESSAGE = \
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"You tried to define an enum named \"%{enum}\" on the model \"%{klass}\", but " \
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"this will generate a %{type} method \"%{method}\", which is already defined " \
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"by %{source}."
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def detect_enum_conflict!(enum_name, method_name, klass_method = false)
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if klass_method && dangerous_class_method?(method_name)
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raise_conflict_error(enum_name, method_name, type: "class")
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elsif !klass_method && dangerous_attribute_method?(method_name)
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raise_conflict_error(enum_name, method_name)
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elsif !klass_method && method_defined_within?(method_name, _enum_methods_module, Module)
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raise_conflict_error(enum_name, method_name, source: "another enum")
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end
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end
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def raise_conflict_error(enum_name, method_name, type: "instance", source: "Active Record")
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raise ArgumentError, ENUM_CONFLICT_MESSAGE % {
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enum: enum_name,
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klass: name,
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type: type,
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method: method_name,
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source: source
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}
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end
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end
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end
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