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a rails plugin for easy bitflag support, with support for pseudo active-record has_many methods

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 Copyright 2008, Jovoto GmbH, [email protected]
 Copyright 2006, Original Developed by Rain City Software, [email protected]
 version 0.3.0

 License: Apache 2.0

 Usage:
   class MyClass << ActiveRecord::Base
     has_flags [ :symbol, position, true/false, :symbol, ... ], [ options ]
   end
 Options:
   :column = 'bit_flags'
   :group => "group_name" , 

 Attribute Accessors:
   readers: name, name?
   writer: name=(v)
   where 'name' is the name of the bit field.  the (v) parameter can be true/false, "true"/"false", 0/1, 'yes'/'no',
   or :yes/:no.  specifically, the following (v) inputs evaluate to true:
     [ true, 'true', 'yes', :yes, 'ok', :ok, 1, '1' ]
   all others, including nil evaluate false.
   groups_name = [Array of flags] , not the plural
   groups_name << name
   groups_name 
   group_ids  
   group_ids = [Array of flag-ids]


 Note: db table must include the column 'bit_flags' as an integer. Use the :column option to
   override with an alternate name
 Note: defaults are set in the 'after_initialized' callback.  If your model needs to use this
   callback, define it in the class and invoke: init_flags.  Here is an example:

   class MyClass << ActiveRecord::Base
     has_flags [ :symbol, position, true/false, :symbol, ... ], [ options ]
     def after_initialize
       init_flags
       ... do more stuff ...
     end
   end
 
 Example Use: 
   has_flags [ :active, true, :has_invoice, 3, :canceled, 8 ]
     this example creates nine accessor methods, active?, active, active=(v), has_invoice?, has_invoice,
     has_invoice=(v), canceled?, canceled and canceled=(v).  the 'bit_flags' bit flag is updated to follow 
     the setters, and when the class is initialized as new (not after a find), the default (active=true) is set.

   has_flags [ :active, true, :deleted 8 ], [ :column = 'status_flags' ]
   The has_flags method registers the Symbol objects as ? and =(v) accessors.  it also takes care of
   updating the underlying data element (defaults to 'bit_flags') when the =(v) methods are invoked.  So
   if MyClass uses has_flags, then you could do the following:
     myclass = MyClass.new
     active = false if active?
     has_invoice = false
     myclass.save
   This would change the myclass.bit_flags value, then send it to the database.

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a rails plugin for easy bitflag support, with support for pseudo active-record has_many methods

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