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Adding documentation and short example ([from this pull request](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/pull/1403)) on conditional attributes. Adding lambda literal notation and example. Adding lambda literal notation and example, and fixing typo. Removing PR reminder Adding Changelog entry Moving CHANGELOG entry under master (unreleased) Use option instead of parameter
400 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
400 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
[Back to Guides](../README.md)
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# Serializers
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Given a serializer class:
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```ruby
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class SomeSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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end
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```
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The following methods may be defined in it:
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### Attributes
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#### ::attributes
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Serialization of the resource `title` and `body`
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| In Serializer | #attributes |
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|---------------------------- |-------------|
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| `attributes :title, :body` | `{ title: 'Some Title', body: 'Some Body' }`
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| `attributes :title, :body`<br>`def body "Special #{object.body}" end` | `{ title: 'Some Title', body: 'Special Some Body' }`
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#### ::attribute
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Serialization of the resource `title`
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| In Serializer | #attributes |
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|---------------------------- |-------------|
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| `attribute :title` | `{ title: 'Some Title' } `
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| `attribute :title, key: :name` | `{ name: 'Some Title' } `
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| `attribute :title { 'A Different Title'}` | `{ title: 'A Different Title' } `
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| `attribute :title`<br>`def title 'A Different Title' end` | `{ title: 'A Different Title' }`
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An `if` or `unless` option can make an attribute conditional. It takes a symbol of a method name on the serializer, or a lambda literal.
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e.g.
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```ruby
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attribute :private_data, if: :is_current_user?
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attribute :another_private_data, if: -> { scope.admin? }
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def is_current_user?
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object.id == current_user.id
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end
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```
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### Associations
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The interface for associations is, generically:
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> `association_type(association_name, options, &block)`
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Where:
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- `association_type` may be `has_one`, `has_many`, `belongs_to`.
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- `association_name` is a method name the serializer calls.
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- optional: `options` may be:
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- `key:` The name used for the serialized association.
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- `serializer:`
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- `if:`
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- `unless:`
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- `virtual_value:`
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- `polymorphic:` defines if polymorphic relation type should be nested in serialized association.
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- optional: `&block` is a context that returns the association's attributes.
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- prevents `association_name` method from being called.
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- return value of block is used as the association value.
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- yields the `serializer` to the block.
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- `include_data false` prevents the `data` key from being rendered in the JSON API relationship.
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#### ::has_one
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e.g.
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```ruby
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has_one :bio
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has_one :blog, key: :site
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has_one :maker, virtual_value: { id: 1 }
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has_one :blog do |serializer|
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serializer.cached_blog
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end
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def cached_blog
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cache_store.fetch("cached_blog:#{object.updated_at}") do
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Blog.find(object.blog_id)
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end
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end
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```
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```ruby
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has_one :blog, if: :show_blog?
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# you can also use a string or lambda
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# has_one :blog, if: 'scope.admin?'
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# has_one :blog, if: -> (serializer) { serializer.scope.admin? }
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# has_one :blog, if: -> { scope.admin? }
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def show_blog?
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scope.admin?
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end
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```
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#### ::has_many
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e.g.
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```ruby
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has_many :comments
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has_many :comments, key: :reviews
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has_many :comments, serializer: CommentPreviewSerializer
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has_many :reviews, virtual_value: [{ id: 1 }, { id: 2 }]
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has_many :comments, key: :last_comments do
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last(1)
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end
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```
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#### ::belongs_to
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e.g.
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```ruby
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belongs_to :author, serializer: AuthorPreviewSerializer
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belongs_to :author, key: :writer
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belongs_to :post
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belongs_to :blog
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def blog
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Blog.new(id: 999, name: 'Custom blog')
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end
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```
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### Polymorphic Relationships
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Polymorphic relationships are serialized by specifying the relationship, like any other association. For example:
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```ruby
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class PictureSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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has_one :imageable
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end
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```
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For more context, see the [tests](../../test/adapter/polymorphic_test.rb) for each adapter.
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### Caching
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#### ::cache
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e.g.
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```ruby
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cache key: 'post', expires_in: 0.1, skip_digest: true
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cache expires_in: 1.day, skip_digest: true
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cache key: 'writer', skip_digest: true
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cache only: [:name], skip_digest: true
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cache except: [:content], skip_digest: true
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cache key: 'blog'
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cache only: [:id]
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```
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#### #cache_key
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e.g.
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```ruby
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# Uses a custom non-time-based cache key
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def cache_key
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"#{self.class.name.downcase}/#{self.id}"
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end
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```
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### Other
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#### ::type
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The `::type` method defines the JSONAPI [type](http://jsonapi.org/format/#document-resource-object-identification) that will be rendered for this serializer.
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It either takes a `String` or `Symbol` as parameter.
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Note: This method is useful only when using the `:json_api` adapter.
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Examples:
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```ruby
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class UserProfileSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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type 'profile'
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end
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class AuthorProfileSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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type :profile
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end
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```
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With the `:json_api` adapter, the previous serializers would be rendered as:
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``` json
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{
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"data": {
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"id": "1",
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"type": "profile"
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}
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}
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```
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#### ::link
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```ruby
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link :self do
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href "https://example.com/link_author/#{object.id}"
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end
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link :author { link_author_url(object) }
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link :link_authors { link_authors_url }
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link :other, 'https://example.com/resource'
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link :posts { link_author_posts_url(object) }
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```
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#### #object
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The object being serialized.
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#### #root
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PR please :)
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#### #scope
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Allows you to include in the serializer access to an external method.
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It's intended to provide an authorization context to the serializer, so that
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you may e.g. show an admin all comments on a post, else only published comments.
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- `scope` is a method on the serializer instance that comes from `options[:scope]`. It may be nil.
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- `scope_name` is an option passed to the new serializer (`options[:scope_name]`). The serializer
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defines a method with that name that calls the `scope`, e.g. `def current_user; scope; end`.
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Note: it does not define the method if the serializer instance responds to it.
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That's a lot of words, so here's some examples:
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First, let's assume the serializer is instantiated in the controller, since that's the usual scenario.
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We'll refer to the serialization context as `controller`.
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| options | `Serializer#scope` | method definition |
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|-------- | ------------------|--------------------|
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| `scope: current_user, scope_name: :current_user` | `current_user` | `Serializer#current_user` calls `controller.current_user`
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| `scope: view_context, scope_name: :view_context` | `view_context` | `Serializer#view_context` calls `controller.view_context`
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We can take advantage of the scope to customize the objects returned based
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on the current user (scope).
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For example, we can limit the posts the current user sees to those they created:
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```ruby
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class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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attributes :id, :title, :body
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# scope comments to those created_by the current user
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has_many :comments do
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object.comments.where(created_by: current_user)
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end
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end
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```
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Whether you write the method as above or as `object.comments.where(created_by: scope)`
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is a matter of preference (assuming `scope_name` has been set).
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##### Controller Authorization Context
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In the controller, the scope/scope_name options are equal to
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the [`serialization_scope`method](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/blob/d02cd30fe55a3ea85e1d351b6e039620903c1871/lib/action_controller/serialization.rb#L13-L20),
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which is `:current_user`, by default.
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Specfically, the `scope_name` is defaulted to `:current_user`, and may be set as
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`serialization_scope :view_context`. The `scope` is set to `send(scope_name)` when `scope_name` is
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present and the controller responds to `scope_name`.
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Thus, in a serializer, the controller provides `current_user` as the
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current authorization scope when you call `render :json`.
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**IMPORTANT**: Since the scope is set at render, you may want to customize it so that `current_user` isn't
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called on every request. This was [also a problem](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/pull/1252#issuecomment-159810477)
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in [`0.9`](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/tree/0-9-stable#customizing-scope).
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We can change the scope from `current_user` to `view_context`.
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```diff
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class SomeController < ActionController::Base
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+ serialization_scope :view_context
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def current_user
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User.new(id: 2, name: 'Bob', admin: true)
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end
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def edit
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user = User.new(id: 1, name: 'Pete')
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render json: user, serializer: AdminUserSerializer, adapter: :json_api
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end
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end
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```
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We could then use the controller method `view_context` in our serializer, like so:
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```diff
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class AdminUserSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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attributes :id, :name, :can_edit
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def can_edit?
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+ view_context.current_user.admin?
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end
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end
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```
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So that when we render the `#edit` action, we'll get
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```json
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{"data":{"id":"1","type":"users","attributes":{"name":"Pete","can_edit":true}}}
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```
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Where `can_edit` is `view_context.current_user.admin?` (true).
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#### #read_attribute_for_serialization(key)
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The serialized value for a given key. e.g. `read_attribute_for_serialization(:title) #=> 'Hello World'`
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#### #links
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PR please :)
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#### #json_key
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PR please :)
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## Examples
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Given two models, a `Post(title: string, body: text)` and a
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`Comment(name: string, body: text, post_id: integer)`, you will have two
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serializers:
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```ruby
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class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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cache key: 'posts', expires_in: 3.hours
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attributes :title, :body
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has_many :comments
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end
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```
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and
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```ruby
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class CommentSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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attributes :name, :body
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belongs_to :post
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end
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```
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Generally speaking, you, as a user of ActiveModelSerializers, will write (or generate) these
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serializer classes.
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## More Info
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For more information, see [the Serializer class on GitHub](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/blob/master/lib/active_model/serializer.rb)
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## Overriding association methods
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To override an association, call `has_many`, `has_one` or `belongs_to` with a block:
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```ruby
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class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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has_many :comments do
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object.comments.active
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end
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end
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```
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## Overriding attribute methods
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To override an attribute, call `attribute` with a block:
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```ruby
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class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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attribute :body do
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object.body.downcase
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end
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end
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```
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## Overriding association serializer lookup
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If you want to define a specific serializer lookup for your associations, you can override
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the `ActiveModel::Serializer.serializer_for` method to return a serializer class based on defined conditions.
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```ruby
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class MySerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
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def self.serializer_for(model, options)
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return SparseAdminSerializer if model.class == 'Admin'
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super
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end
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# the rest of the serializer
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end
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```
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