i have created a LocalizedString custom data type for storing / displaying translations using mongo_mapper.
This works for one field but as soon as i introduce another field they get written over each and display only one value for both f开发者_如何学Goields. The to_mongo and from_mongo seem to be not workings properly. Please can any one help with this ? her is the code :
class LocalizedString
attr_accessor :translations
def self.from_mongo(value)
puts self.inspect
@translations ||= if value.is_a?(Hash)
value
elsif value.nil?
{}
else
{ I18n.locale.to_s => value }
end
@translations[I18n.locale.to_s]
end
def self.to_mongo(value)
puts self.inspect
if value.is_a?(Hash)
@translations = value
else
@translations[I18n.locale.to_s] = value
end
@translations
end
end
Thank alot Rick
The problem is that from within your [to|from]_mongo methods, @translations refers to a class variable, not the instance variable you expect. So what's happening is that each time from_mongo is called, it overwrites the value.
A fixed version would be something like this:
class LocalizedString
attr_accessor :translations
def initialize( translations = {} )
@translations = translations
end
def self.from_mongo(value)
if value.is_a?(Hash)
LocalizedString.new(value)
elsif value.nil?
LocalizedString.new()
else
LocalizedString.new( { I18n.locale.to_s => value })
end
end
def self.to_mongo(value)
value.translations if value.present?
end
end
I found that jared's response didn't work for me -- I would get that translations was not found when using LocalizedString in an EmbeddedDocument.
I would get a similar problem on rick's solution where translations was nil when using embedded documents. To get a working solution, I took Rick's solution, changed the translation variable to be an instance variable so it wouldn't be overwritten for each new field that used LocalizedString, and then added a check to make sure translations wasn't nil (and create a new Hash if it was).
Of all the LocalizedString solutions floating around, this is the first time I've been able to get it working on EmbeddedDocuments and without the overwritting problem -- there still may be other issues! :)
class LocalizedString
attr_accessor :translations
def self.from_mongo(value)
puts self.inspect
translations ||= if value.is_a?(Hash)
value
elsif value.nil?
{}
else
{ I18n.locale.to_s => value }
end
translations[I18n.locale.to_s]
end
def self.to_mongo(value)
puts self.inspect
if value.is_a?(Hash)
translations = value
else
if translations.nil?
translations = Hash.new()
end
translations[I18n.locale.to_s] = value
end
translations
end
end
I found this post: which was very helpful. He extended HashWithIndifferentAccess to work as a LocalizedString. The only thing I didn't like about it was having to explicly specify the locale when setting it each time -- I wanted it to work more like a string. of course, you can't overload the = operator (at least I don't think you can) so I used <<, and added a to_s method that would output the string of the current locale....
class LocalizedString < HashWithIndifferentAccess
def self.from_mongo(value)
LocalizedString.new(value || {})
end
def available_locales
symbolize_keys.keys
end
def to_s
self[I18n.locale]
end
def in_current_locale=(value)
self[I18n.locale] = value
end
def << (value)
self[I18n.locale] = value
end
end
and then I have a class like:
class SimpleModel
include MongoMapper::Document
key :test, LocalizedString
end
and can do things like
I18n.locale = :en
a = SimpleModel.new
a.test << "English"
I18n.locale = :de
a.test << "German"
puts a.test # access the translation for the current locale
I18n.locale = :en
puts a.test # access the translation for the current locale
puts a.test[:de] # access a translation explicitly
puts a.test[:en]
puts a.test.inspect
and get
German
English
German
English
{"en"=>"English", "de"=>"German"}
so there we go -- this one actually seems to work for me. Comments welcome, and hope this helps someone!
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