You know what method is being and you want to figure out how it got there. Raising an exception is a bit harsh since all you want is a stack trace
puts caller
Seriously. It's that easy. If you're getting too much information you could
# When calling a method with a splat then the parameters are passed as a comma separated list | |
# When receiving arguments with a splat then they are converted into an Array | |
# When using a double splat (2.0+) then the argument is converted into a Hash (i.e. named parameters) | |
def foo(*args) | |
p args | |
end | |
foo 'a', 'b', 'c' | |
# => ["a", "b", "c"] |
You know what method is being and you want to figure out how it got there. Raising an exception is a bit harsh since all you want is a stack trace
puts caller
Seriously. It's that easy. If you're getting too much information you could
# Call scopes directly from your URL params: | |
# | |
# @products = Product.filter(params.slice(:status, :location, :starts_with)) | |
module Filterable | |
extend ActiveSupport::Concern | |
module ClassMethods | |
# Call the class methods with names based on the keys in <tt>filtering_params</tt> | |
# with their associated values. For example, "{ status: 'delayed' }" would call |
class Avatar < ActiveRecord::Base | |
attr_accessor :content_type, :original_filename, :image_data | |
before_save :decode_base64_image | |
has_attached_file :image, | |
PAPERCLIP_CONFIG.merge( | |
:styles => { | |
:thumb => '32x32#', | |
:medium => '64x64#', |