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ActiveModelSerializers

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ActiveModelSerializers brings convention over configuration to your JSON generation.

ActiveModelSerializers works through two components: serializers and adapters.

Serializers describe which attributes and relationships should be serialized.

Adapters describe how attributes and relationships should be serialized.

SerializableResource co-ordinates the resource, Adapter and Serializer to produce the resource serialization. The serialization has the #as_json, #to_json and #serializable_hash methods used by the Rails JSON Renderer. (SerializableResource actually delegates these methods to the adapter.)

By default ActiveModelSerializers will use the Attributes Adapter. But we strongly advise you to use JsonApi Adapter, which follows 1.0 of the format specified in jsonapi.org/format. Check how to change the adapter in the sections below.

RELEASE CANDIDATE, PLEASE READ

This is the master branch of ActiveModelSerializers.

It will become the 0.10.0 release when it's ready. Currently this is a release candidate.

0.10.x is not backward compatible with 0.9.x nor 0.8.x.

0.10.x will be based on the 0.8.0 code, but with a more flexible architecture. We'd love your help. Learn how you can help here.

It is generally safe and recommended to use the master branch.

For more information, see the post 'The future of AMS'.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'active_model_serializers'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Getting Started

See Getting Started for the nuts and bolts.

More information is available in the Guides and High-level behavior.

Getting Help

If you find a bug, please report an Issue and see our contributing guide.

If you have a question, please post to Stack Overflow.

If you'd like to chat, we have a community slack.

Thanks!

High-level behavior

Given a serializable model:

# either
class SomeResource < ActiveRecord::Base
  # columns: title, body
end
# or
class SomeResource < ActiveModelSerializers::Model
  attr_accessor :title, :body
end

And initialized as:

resource = SomeResource.new(title: 'ActiveModelSerializers', body: 'Convention over configuration')

Given a serializer for the serializable model:

class SomeSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
  attribute :title, key: :name
  attributes :body
end

The model can be serialized as:

options = {}
serialization = SerializableResource.new(resource, options)
serialization.to_json
serialization.as_json

SerializableResource delegates to the adapter, which it builds as:

adapter_options = {}
adapter = Adapter.create(serializer, adapter_options)
adapter.to_json
adapter.as_json
adapter.serializable_hash

The adapter formats the serializer's attributes and associations (a.k.a. includes):

serializer_options = {}
serializer = SomeSerializer.new(resource, serializer_options)
serializer.attributes
serializer.associations

See ARCHITECTURE.md for more information.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

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ActiveModel::Serializer implementation and Rails hooks

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