Active Model Attribute Methods
Provides a way to add prefixes and suffixes to your methods as well as handling the creation of ActiveRecord::Base - like class methods such as table_name.
The requirements to implement ActiveModel::AttributeMethods are to:
- 
include ActiveModel::AttributeMethodsin your class.
- 
Call each of its methods you want to add, such as attribute_method_suffixorattribute_method_prefix.
- 
Call define_attribute_methodsafter the other methods are called.
- 
Define the various generic _attributemethods that you have declared.
- 
Define an attributesmethod which returns a hash with each attribute name in your model as hash key and the attribute value as hash value.Hashkeys must be strings.
A minimal implementation could be:
class Person
  include ActiveModel::AttributeMethods
  attribute_method_affix  prefix: 'reset_', suffix: '_to_default!'
  attribute_method_suffix '_contrived?'
  attribute_method_prefix 'clear_'
  define_attribute_methods :name
  attr_accessor :name
  def attributes
    { 'name' => @name }
  end
  private
    def attribute_contrived?(attr)
      true
    end
    def clear_attribute(attr)
      send("#{attr}=", nil)
    end
    def reset_attribute_to_default!(attr)
      send("#{attr}=", 'Default Name')
    end
end
Constants
| CALL_COMPILABLE_REGEXP | = | /\A[a-zA-Z_]\w*[!?]?\z/ | 
| NAME_COMPILABLE_REGEXP | = | /\A[a-zA-Z_]\w*[!?=]?\z/ | 
Instance Public methods
attribute_missing(match, ...) Link
attribute_missing is like method_missing, but for attributes. When method_missing is called we check to see if there is a matching attribute method. If so, we tell attribute_missing to dispatch the attribute. This method can be overloaded to customize the behavior.
method_missing(method, ...) Link
Allows access to the object attributes, which are held in the hash returned by attributes, as though they were first-class methods. So a Person class with a name attribute can for example use Person#name and Person#name= and never directly use the attributes hash – except for multiple assignments with ActiveRecord::Base#attributes=.
It’s also possible to instantiate related objects, so a Client class belonging to the clients table with a master_id foreign key can instantiate master through Client#master.
respond_to?(method, include_private_methods = false) Link
# File activemodel/lib/active_model/attribute_methods.rb, line 528 def respond_to?(method, include_private_methods = false) if super true elsif !include_private_methods && super(method, true) # If we're here then we haven't found among non-private methods # but found among all methods. Which means that the given method is private. false else !matched_attribute_method(method.to_s).nil? end end
respond_to_without_attributes?(method, include_private_methods = false) Link
A Person instance with a name attribute can ask person.respond_to?(:name), person.respond_to?(:name=), and person.respond_to?(:name?) which will all return true.