In an Active Record model, usually you will have a column that can only have a set of pre-defined values (such as a status column). Normally, you would define a constant for those values as well as several helper methods like the following example:

class Post < ActiveRecord :: Base STATUS = %w(draft published) def draft? status == 'draft' end def published? status == 'published' end end

In the upcoming Rails 4.1.0, the core team has added ActiveRecord::Enum support, which help clean up this type of attribute. With enum , you can rewrite the above code as:

class Post < ActiveRecord :: Base enum status: %w(draft published) end

With this single line of code, Rails will generate several helper methods for you:

# Query method post . draft? post . published? # Action method post . draft! post . published! # List of statuses and their corresponding values in the database. Post . statuses

There is one gotcha which you might notice since this is called enum : you will need to update your database column to be an integer value. Rails will do implicit mapping between the integer value and the index of the value in the array automatically.

# Given that the `status` column has default value of '0' post = Post . new post . status # => "draft" post . status = 'published' post . published? # => true post . save! # => UPDATE posts SET status = '1' WHERE id = '1'

If you are interested in trying out this feature, you can try it today on Rails 4.1.0.rc2. Be sure to read the documentation and release notes for more information. If you find any bugs, please do not forget to report them on Ruby on Rails GitHub issues.