This library provides integration of the money gem with Rails.
Use monetize
to specify which fields you want to be backed by
Money objects and helpers provided by the money
gem.
Currently, this library is in active development mode, so if you would like to have a new feature, feel free to open a new issue here. You are also welcome to contribute to the project.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'money-rails', '~> 1.12'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself using:
$ gem install money-rails
You can also use the money configuration initializer:
$ rails g money_rails:initializer
There, you can define the default currency value and set other configuration parameters for the rails app.
Without Rails in rack-based applications, call during initialization:
MoneyRails::Hooks.init
For example, we create a Product model which has an integer column called
price_cents
and we want to handle it using a Money
object instead:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
monetize :price_cents
end
Now each Product object will also have an attribute called price
which
is a Money
object, and can be used for money comparisons, conversions etc.
In this case the name of the money attribute is created automagically by removing the
_cents
suffix from the column name.
If you are using another database column name, or you prefer another name for the
money attribute, then you can provide an as
argument with a string value to the
monetize
macro:
monetize :discount_subunit, as: "discount"
Now the model objects will have a discount
attribute which is a Money
object, wrapping the value of the discount_subunit
column with a Money
instance.
If you want to add a money field to a product model you can use the add_monetize
helper.
This helper can be customized inside a MoneyRails.configure
block. You should customize
the add_monetize
helper to match the most common use case and utilize it across all
migrations.
class MonetizeProduct < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_monetize :products, :price
# OR
change_table :products do |t|
t.monetize :price
end
end
end
Another example, where the currency column is not included:
class MonetizeItem < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_monetize :items, :price, currency: { present: false }
end
end
Notice: Default value of currency field, generated by migration’s helper, is
USD. To override these defaults, you need change the default_currency
in an
initializer and run migrations.
The add_monetize
helper is reversible, so you can use it inside change
migrations. If you’re writing separate up
and down
methods, you can use the
remove_monetize
helper.
If you want to allow nil
and/or blank values to a specific monetized field,
you can use the :allow_nil
parameter:
# in Product model
monetize :optional_price_cents, allow_nil: true
# in Migration
def change
add_monetize :products,
:optional_price,
amount: { null: true, default: nil },
currency: { null: true, default: nil }
end
# now blank assignments are permitted
product.optional_price = nil
product.save # returns without errors
product.optional_price # => nil
product.optional_price_cents # => nil
If you foresee that you will be saving large values (range is -2147483648 to
+2147483647 for Postgres), increase your integer column limit to bigint
:
def change
change_column :products, :price_cents, :integer, limit: 8
end
You can also pass along numericality validation options such as this:
monetize :price_in_a_range_cents,
allow_nil: true,
numericality: {
greater_than_or_equal_to: 0,
less_than_or_equal_to: 10000
}
Or, if you prefer, you can skip validations entirely for the attribute. This is useful if chosen attributes are aggregate methods and you wish to avoid executing them on every record save.
monetize :price_in_a_range_cents, disable_validation: true
You can also skip validations independently from each other by simply passing false
to the validation you are willing to skip, like this:
monetize :price_in_a_range_cents, numericality: false
Money
is available as a field type to supply during a field definition:
class Product
include Mongoid::Document
field :price, type: Money
end
obj = Product.new
# => #<Product _id: 4fe865699671383656000001, _type: nil, price: nil>
obj.price
# => nil
obj.price = Money.new(100, 'EUR')
# => #<Money cents:100 currency:EUR>
obj.price
#=> #<Money cents:100 currency:EUR>
obj.save
# => true
obj
# => #<Product _id: 4fe865699671383656000001, _type: nil, price: {cents: 100, currency_iso: "EUR"}>
obj.price
#=> #<Money cents:100 currency:EUR>
## You can access the money hash too:
obj[:price]
# => {cents: 100, currency_iso: "EUR"}
The usual options on field
as index
, default
, ..., are available.
Method return values can be monetized in the same way attributes are monetized. For example:
class Transaction < ActiveRecord::Base
monetize :price_cents
monetize :tax_cents
monetize :total_cents
def total_cents
price_cents + tax_cents
end
end
Now each Transaction
object has a method called total
which returns a Money
object.
money-rails supports a set of options to handle currencies for your monetized fields. The default option for every conversion is to use the global default currency of the Money library, as given in the configuration initializer of money-rails:
# config/initializers/money.rb
MoneyRails.configure do |config|
# set the default currency
config.default_currency = :usd
end
For a complete list of available currencies: ISO 4217
If you need to set the default currency on a per-request basis, such as in a
multi-tenant application, you may use a lambda to lazy-load the default currency
from a field in a configuration model called Tenant
in this example:
# config/initializers/money.rb
MoneyRails.configure do |config|
# set the default currency based on client configuration
config.default_currency = -> { Tenant.current.default_currency }
end
Be aware that this does not work in Rails 7+, as the lambda is evaluated
immediately, and therefore requires your model to be already loaded.
Workarounds include wrapping the initialization in
ActiveSupport::Reloader.to_prepare
, or creating a function that rescues
unloaded constants with an initialization-time default, and running that in your lambda.
In many cases this is not enough, so there are some other options to meet your needs.
You can override the global default currency within a specific ActiveRecord
model using the register_currency
macro:
# app/models/product.rb
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
# Use EUR as model level currency
register_currency :eur
monetize :discount_subunit, as: "discount"
monetize :bonus_cents
end
Now product.discount
and product.bonus
will return a Money
object using
EUR as their currency, instead of the default USD.
(This is not available in Mongoid).
By passing the option :with_currency
to the monetize
macro call,
with a currency code (symbol or string) or a callable object (object that responds
to the call
method) that returns a currency code, as its value, you can define
a currency in a more granular way. This will let you attach the given currency
only to the specified monetized model attribute (allowing you to, for example,
monetize different attributes of the same model with different currencies).
This allows you to override both the model level and the global default currencies:
# app/models/product.rb
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
# Use EUR as the model level currency
register_currency :eur
monetize :discount_subunit, as: "discount"
monetize :bonus_cents, with_currency: :gbp
end
In this case product.bonus
will return a Money object with GBP as its
currency, whereas product.discount.currency.to_s # => EUR
As mentioned earlier you can use an object that responds to the method call
and accepts the model instance as a parameter. That means you can use a Proc
or lambda
(we would recommend lambda
over Proc
because of their
different control flow characteristics)
or even define a separate class
with an instance or class method (maybe even a
module
) to return the currency code:
class DeliveryFee
def call(product)
# some logic here that will return a currency code
end
end
module OptionalPrice
def self.call(product)
# some logic here that will return a currency code
end
end
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
monetize :price_cents, with_currency: ->(_product) { :gbp }
monetize :delivery_fee_cents, with_currency: DeliveryFee.new
monetize :optional_price_cents, with_currency: OptionalPrice
end
All the previous options do not require any extra model fields to hold
the currency values. If the currency of a field will vary from
one model instance to another, then you should add a column called currency
to your database table and pass the option with_model_currency
to the monetize
macro.
money-rails will use this knowledge to override the model level and global default values. Non-nil instance currency values also override attribute currency values, so they have the highest precedence.
class Transaction < ActiveRecord::Base
# This model has a separate currency column
attr_accessible :amount_cents, :currency, :tax_cents
# Use model level currency
register_currency :gbp
monetize :amount_cents, with_model_currency: :currency
monetize :tax_cents, with_model_currency: :currency
end
# Now instantiating with a specific currency overrides
# the model and global currencies
t = Transaction.new(amount_cents: 2500, currency: "CAD")
t.amount == Money.new(2500, "CAD") # true
You can handle a bunch of configuration params through money.rb
initializer:
MoneyRails.configure do |config|
# To set the default currency
#
# config.default_currency = :usd
# Set default bank object
#
# Example:
# config.default_bank = EuCentralBank.new
# Add exchange rates to current money bank object.
# (The conversion rate refers to one direction only)
#
# Example:
# config.add_rate "USD", "CAD", 1.24515
# config.add_rate "CAD", "USD", 0.803115
# To handle the inclusion of validations for monetized fields
# The default value is true
#
# config.include_validations = true
# Default ActiveRecord migration configuration values for columns:
#
# config.amount_column = { prefix: '', # column name prefix
# postfix: '_cents', # column name postfix
# column_name: nil, # full column name (overrides prefix, postfix and accessor name)
# type: :integer, # column type
# present: true, # column will be created
# null: false, # other options will be treated as column options
# default: 0
# }
#
# config.currency_column = { prefix: '',
# postfix: '_currency',
# column_name: nil,
# type: :string,
# present: true,
# null: false,
# default: 'USD'
# }
# Register a custom currency
#
# Example:
# config.register_currency = {
# priority: 1,
# iso_code: "EU4",
# name: "Euro with subunit of 4 digits",
# symbol: "€",
# symbol_first: true,
# subunit: "Subcent",
# subunit_to_unit: 10000,
# thousands_separator: ".",
# decimal_mark: ","
# }
# Specify a rounding mode
# Any one of:
#
# BigDecimal::ROUND_UP,
# BigDecimal::ROUND_DOWN,
# BigDecimal::ROUND_HALF_UP,
# BigDecimal::ROUND_HALF_DOWN,
# BigDecimal::ROUND_HALF_EVEN,
# BigDecimal::ROUND_CEILING,
# BigDecimal::ROUND_FLOOR
#
# set to BigDecimal::ROUND_HALF_EVEN by default
#
# config.rounding_mode = BigDecimal::ROUND_HALF_UP
# Set default money format globally.
# Default value is nil meaning "ignore this option".
# Example:
#
# config.default_format = {
# no_cents_if_whole: nil,
# symbol: nil,
# sign_before_symbol: nil
# }
end
default_currency
: Set the default (application wide) currency (USD is the default)include_validations
: Permit the inclusion of avalidates_numericality_of
validation for each monetized field (the default is true)register_currency
: Register one custom currency. This option can be used more than once to set more custom currencies. The value should be a hash of all the necessary key/value pairs (important keys::priority
,:iso_code
,:name
,:symbol
,:symbol_first
,:subunit
,:subunit_to_unit
,:thousands_separator
,:decimal_mark
).add_rate
: Provide custom exchange rate for currencies in one direction only! This rate is added to the attached bank object.default_bank
: The default bank object holding exchange rates etc. (https://github.com/RubyMoney/money#currency-exchange)default_format
: ForceMoney#format
to use these options for formatting.amount_column
: Provide values for the amount column (holding the fractional part of a money object).currency_column
: Provide default values or even disable (present: false
) the currency column.rounding_mode
: SetMoney.rounding_mode
to one of the BigDecimal constants.
For examples below, @money_object == <Money fractional:650 currency:USD>
Helper | Result |
---|---|
currency_symbol |
<span class="currency_symbol">$</span> |
humanized_money @money_object |
6.50 |
humanized_money_with_symbol @money_object |
$6.50 |
money_without_cents @money_object |
6 |
money_without_cents_and_with_symbol @money_object |
$6 |
money_only_cents @money_object |
50 |
humanized_money
and humanized_money_with_symbol
will not render the cents part if it contains only zeros, unless config.no_cents_if_whole
is set to false
in the money.rb
configuration (default: true).
Note that the config.default_format
will be overwritten by config.no_cents_if_whole
.
So humanized_money
will ignore config.default_format = { no_cents_if_whole: false }
if you don't set config.no_cents_if_whole = false
.
If you use Rspec there is a test helper implementation.
Just write require "money-rails/test_helpers"
in spec_helper.rb
.
is_expected.to monetize(:price)
This will ensure that a column called price_cents
is being monetized.
is_expected.to monetize(:price).allow_nil
By using allow_nil
you can specify money attributes that accept nil values.
is_expected.to monetize(:price).as(:discount_value)
By using as
chain you can specify the exact name to which a monetized
column is being mapped.
is_expected.to monetize(:price).with_currency(:gbp)
By using the with_currency
chain you can specify the expected currency
for the chosen money attribute. (You can also combine all the chains.)
is_expected.to monetize(:price).with_model_currency(:currency)
By using the with_model_currency
chain you can specify the attribute that
contains the currency to be used for the chosen money attribute.
For examples on using the test_helpers look at test_helpers_spec.rb
- ActiveRecord (>= 3.x)
- Mongoid (>= 2.x)
- MRI Ruby >= 2.6
You can see a full list of the currently supported interpreters in ruby.yml
- Fork the repo
- Run the tests
- Make your changes
- Test your changes
- Create a Pull Request
Our tests are executed with several ORMs - see Rakefile
for details. To install all required gems run rake spec:all
That command will take care of installing all required gems for all the different Gemfiles and then running the test suite with the installed bundle.
You can also run the test suite against a specific ORM or Rails version, rake -T
will give you an idea of the possible task (take a look at the tasks under the spec: namespace).
If you are testing against mongoid, make sure to have the mongod process running before executing the suite, (E.g. sudo mongod --quiet
)
- Andreas Loupasakis (https://github.com/alup)
- Shane Emmons (https://github.com/semmons99)
- Simone Carletti (https://github.com/weppos)
MIT License. Copyright 2023 RubyMoney.