Based on Mongoid implementation, FmStore behaves in a way very similar to how you might expect ActiveRecord to behave. With callback and validation and ActiveModel adherence.
Place a fm_store.yml
file inside the config directory.
development:
host: 127.0.0.1
account_name:
password:
ssl: false
log_actions: true
You can setup a model using the following generator:
rails generate fm_model <file_name> <layout_name> <database_name>
This is using the Job example:
class Job
include FmStore::Layout
set_layout "jobs"
set_database "jobs "
field :modify_date, DateTime, :fm_name => "modify date"
field :company, String
field :location, String
field :jdid, String
... # more fields
has_many :job_applications, :reference_key => "jdid"
validates_presence_of :job_title
# put your class methods here
class << self
def published
where("status" => "open")
end
end
end
There will be times when FileMaker give us String or Numeric ID. For example, caid
can become "52383.0".
What we really want is a String like "52383". You can force it by using the format_with
option and provide
your own implementation of the ID.
has_many :employments, :reference_key => "candidate_id", :format_with => :formatted_candidate_id
def formatted_candidate_id
candidate_id.to_s.split(".").first
end
All finder methods such as where
, limit
, order
, in
return a criteria object
which contain the params and options. No database call will be made until a kicker
method has been called such as each
, first
, etc.
# Find single job with ID. There is no #find method. Not to be confused with
# the instance method Job#id like @job.id which return you "JDID1" for example.
# ID will default to -recid. If you wish to change that, use the :identity option
class Job
include FmStore::Layout
field :job_id, String, :fm_name => "jdid", :identity => true
end
@job = Job.id("JDID1") #=> You do not need to append "=" sign to it, like "=JDID1"
You still can get the original internal FileMaker id by:
@job = Job.fm_id("18") # Using the -recid
# Find 10 records
@jobs = Job.limit(10)
# Find 10 records sorted. By default is ASC
@jobs = Job.limit(10).order("status") # same as @jobs = Job.limit(10).order("status asc")
@jobs = Job.limit(10).order("status desc, jdid")
# Find based on condition (single value per field). Please use the field name
# rather than the FileMaker field name like "modify date"
@jobs = Job.where("status" => "open")
@jobs = Job.where("category" => "Account", "status" => "open")
# Find with operator
@jobs = Job.where("salary.gt" => 2500)
# Find all payroll details whose gross salary is between $1.00 to $10.00 in order
PayrollDetail.where("gross_salary.bw" => "1...10").order("gross salary")
# Excluding
# WARNING - exclude cannot chain to search for now
@jobs = Job.where("status.neq" => "open")
@jobs = Job.exclude("status" => "open") # this is preferred
# Logical OR
# By default, conditions are ANDed together. Pass in false to make it ORed together
# Remember to supply curly braces for the first parameter which is a hash
@jobs = Job.where({"status" => "open", :category => "Account"}, false)
# Total count
@total = Job.where("status" => "closed").total
@total = Job.total
# Find based on multiple values in a single field
@jobs = Job.in(:status => ["pending", "closed"])
@jobs = Job.in(:status => ["pending", "closed"]).order("status").limit(10)
# You can also pass in single String instead of an array
@jobs = Job.in(:status => "open", :job_id => ["=JD123", "=JD456"]) #=> the value "open" will automatically be ["open"]
Every model will be exposed the search
class method. Based on the searchable
field option, this search
method will know which fields to search for.
# In your model
field :name, String, :fm_name => "company", :searchable => true
# Search for it in your controller
@company = Company.search(params)
@companies = Company.where(:category => "REGULAR").search(params)
@jobs = Job.in(:status => ["open", "pending"]).search(:q => "engineer, programmer")
search
will always look for params[:q] as the query keyword and params[:page] as the page number.
WARNING - Please note that exclude
cannot use search
for now.
Some search examples:
Job.where(:status => "open").search(:q => "engineer") #=> (q0,q1)
Job.in(:status => ["open"]).search(:q => "engineer") #=> (q0,q1)
Job.in(:status => ["open", "pending"]).search(:q => "engineer") #=> (q0,q2);(q1,q2)
Paging is supported via WillPaginate rails3 branch. Any limit
criteria will be
ignore when you call paginate
, but you can override per_page
as usual.
@jobs = Job.where("status" => "open").paginate(:page => params[:page] || 1)
@jobs = Job.where("status" => "open").paginate(:per_page => 10, :page => params[:page] || 1)
paginate
is a kicker method in itself so database connection will be made and
result being retrieved.
If any of the where
, in
, exclude
do not meet your need, you can build the query yourself using FileMaker's findquery
command.
For example:
JobApplication.custom_query(
"-query" => "(q0,q1);!(q2);!(q3);!(q4)",
"-q0" => "caid",
"-q0.value" => "123",
"-q1" => "status2",
"-q1.value" => "DeclineOffer",
"-q2" => "status1",
"-q2.value" => "Apply",
"-q3" => "status1",
"-q3.value" => "Select",
"-q4" => "status1",
"-q4.value" => "SMS"
).order("date2 DESC")
The query is
(q0,q1);!(q2);!(q3);!(q4)
which means find
q0 and q1 and omit q2, q3, and q4
- eq =word
- cn word
- bw word*
- ew *word
- gt > word
- gte >= word
- lt < word
- lte <= word
- neq omit,word
In order to save data to FileMaker, check you have the necessary permission.
@leave = Leave.new
@leave.contract_code = "S1234.01"
@leave.fm_attributes #=> {"contract code" => "S1234.01"}
@leave.from_date = Date.today
@leave.fm_attributes #=> {"from"=>"08/19/2010", "contract code" => "S1234.01"}
@leave.valid? # test if model is valid or not
@leave.errors # get all the errors if there are any
@leave.save # this will automatically called valid? and return false if failed
As you can see, the real work of converting Ruby object to the one suitable for FileMaker is the fm_attributes
value method.