- T
Builds an XML document to represent the model. Some configuration is
availble through options
, however more complicated cases
should use override ActiveRecord’s to_xml.
By default the generated XML document will include the processing instruction and all object’s attributes. For example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <topic> <title>The First Topic</title> <author-name>David</author-name> <id type="integer">1</id> <approved type="boolean">false</approved> <replies-count type="integer">0</replies-count> <bonus-time type="datetime">2000-01-01T08:28:00+12:00</bonus-time> <written-on type="datetime">2003-07-16T09:28:00+1200</written-on> <content>Have a nice day</content> <author-email-address>david@loudthinking.com</author-email-address> <parent-id></parent-id> <last-read type="date">2004-04-15</last-read> </topic>
This behavior can be controlled with :only, :except, :skip_instruct, :skip_types and :dasherize. The :only and :except options are the same as for the attributes method. The default is to dasherize all column names, to disable this, set :dasherize to false. To not have the column type included in the XML output, set :skip_types to false.
For instance:
topic.to_xml(:skip_instruct => true, :except => [ :id, :bonus_time, :written_on, :replies_count ]) <topic> <title>The First Topic<%rtitle> <author-name>David</author-name> <approved type="boolean">false<%rapproved> <content>Have a nice day</content> <author-email-address>david@loudthinking.com<%rauthor-email-address> <parent-id></parent-id> <last-read type="date">2004-04-15<%rlast-read> </topic>
To include first level associations use :include
firm.to_xml :include => [ :account, :clients ] <xxml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <firm> <id type="integer">1<%rid> <rating type="integer">1</rating> <name>37signals<%rname> <clients> <client> <rating type="integer">1</rating> <name>Summit<%rname> </client> <client> <rating type="integer">1<%rrating> <name>Microsoft</ame> <%rclient> </clients> <account> <id type="integer">1<%rid> <credit-limit type="integer">50</credit-limit> <%raccount> </firm>
To include any methods on the object(s) being called use :methods
firm.to_xml :methods => [ :calculated_earnings, :real_earnings ] <firm> # ... normal attributes as shown above ... <calculated-earnings>100000000000000000<%rcalculated-earnings> <real-earnings>5</real-earnings> <%rfirm>
To call any Proc’s on the object(s) use :procs. The Proc’s are passed a modified version of the options hash that was given to to_xml.
proc = Proc.new { |options| options[:builder].tag!('abc', 'def') } firm.to_xml :procs => [ proc ] <firm> # ... normal attributes as shown above ... <abc>def</abc> <%rfirm>
You may override the #to_xml method in your ActiveRecord::Base subclasses if you need to. The general form of doing this is
class IHaveMyOwnXML < ActiveRecord::Base def to_xml(options = {}) options[:indent] ||= 2 xml = options[:builder] ||= Builder::XmlMarkup.new(:indent => options[:indent]) xml.instruct! unless options[:skip_instruct] xml.level_one do xml.tag!(:second_level, 'content') end end end
Source: show
# File rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/xml_serialization.rb, line 106 def to_xml(options = {}) XmlSerializer.new(self, options).to_s end