For example:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
serialize :scholarship
end
user = User.create(:scholarship=> { "name" => "test", "state_ids" => ["1", "2"]})
User.find(user.id).scholarship# => { "name" => "test", "state_ids" => ["1", "2"] }
Question
if i have params like this :
params["scholarship"] = {"name"=>"test", "state_ids"=>["1", "2", "3", "4"]}
and when i create object to database field state_id not save to database?
how to save to database with format :
#<Scholarship id: 1, name: "test", state_id: "["1", "2", "3", "4"]">
how do that?
thanks before
Solution 2
For example:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
serialize :scholarship
end
user = User.create(:scholarship=> { "name" => "test", "state_ids" => ["1", "2"]})
User.find(user.id).scholarship# => { "name" => "test", "state_ids" => ["1", "2"] }
OTHER TIPS
Also you can use PostrgreSQL support for array storing. (If you're using PG of course). Your migration will look like that:
add_column :table_name, :column_name, :string, array: true, default: []
But don't forget about validations.
In your model have
serialize :state_ids
Here is a link to the documentation
That being said it looks like you're trying to pass state_ids parameters and save it in state_id, is this what you're intending to do?
state_ids != state_id
you've got 2 different names for your attribute, so they don't line up.
then use serialize :state_ids
once you've renamed the column.
However if you're storing a list of state_ids, i'm going to guess you also have a states table, and so should look into using has_and_belongs_to_many association.