Upgrading Hashie ================ ### Upgrading to 3.2.1 #### Possible coercion changes The improvements made to coercions in version 3.2.1 [issue #200](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/pull/200) do not break the documented API, but are significant enough that changes may effect undocumented side-effects. Applications that depended on those side-effects will need to be updated. **Change**: Type coercion no longer creates new objects if the input matches the target type. Previously coerced properties always resulted in the creation of a new object, even when it wasn't necessary. This had the effect of a `dup` or `clone` on coerced properties but not uncoerced ones. If necessary, `dup` or `clone` your own objects. Do not assume Hashie will do it for you. **Change**: Failed coercion attempts now raise Hashie::CoercionError. Hashie now raises a Hashie::CoercionError that details on the property that could not be coerced, the source and target type of the coercion, and the internal error. Previously only the internal error was raised. Applications that were attempting to rescuing the internal errors should be updated to rescue Hashie::CoercionError instead. ### Upgrading to 3.0 #### Compatibility with Rails 4 Strong Parameters Version 2.1 introduced support to prevent default Rails 4 mass-assignment protection behavior. This was [issue #89](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/issues/89), resolved in [#104](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/pull/104). In version 2.2 this behavior has been removed in [#147](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/pull/147) in favor of a mixin and finally extracted into a separate gem in Hashie 3.0. To enable 2.1 compatible behavior with Rails 4, use the [hashie_rails](http://rubygems.org/gems/hashie_rails) gem. ``` gem 'hashie_rails' ``` See [#154](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/pull/154) and [Mash and Rails 4 Strong Parameters](README.md#mash-and-rails-4-strong-parameters) for more details. #### Key Conversions in Hashie::Dash and Hashie::Trash Version 2.1 and older of Hashie::Dash and Hashie::Trash converted keys to strings by default. This is no longer the case in 2.2. Consider the following code. ```ruby class Person < Hashie::Dash property :name end p = Person.new(name: 'dB.') ``` Version 2.1 behaves as follows. ```ruby p.name # => 'dB.' p[:name] # => 'dB.' p['name'] # => 'dB.' # not what I put in p.inspect # => { 'name' => 'dB.' } p.to_hash # => { 'name' => 'dB.' } ``` It was not possible to achieve the behavior of preserving keys, as described in [issue #151](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/issues/151). Version 2.2 does not perform this conversion by default. ```ruby p.name # => 'dB.' p[:name] # => 'dB.' # p['name'] # => NoMethodError p.inspect # => { :name => 'dB.' } p.to_hash # => { :name => 'dB.' } ``` To enable behavior compatible with older versions, use `Hashie::Extensions::Dash::IndifferentAccess`. ```ruby class Person < Hashie::Dash include Hashie::Extensions::Dash::IndifferentAccess property :name end ``` #### Key Conversions in Hashie::Hash#to_hash Version 2.1 or older of Hash#to_hash converted keys to strings automatically. ```ruby instance = Hashie::Hash[first: 'First', 'last' => 'Last'] instance.to_hash # => { "first" => 'First', "last" => 'Last' } ``` It was possible to symbolize keys by passing `:symbolize_keys`, however it was not possible to retrieve the hash with initial key values. ```ruby instance.to_hash(symbolize_keys: true) # => { :first => 'First', :last => 'Last' } instance.to_hash(stringify_keys: true) # => { "first" => 'First', "last" => 'Last' } ``` Version 2.2 no longer converts keys by default. ```ruby instance = Hashie::Hash[first: 'First', 'last' => 'Last'] instance.to_hash # => { :first => 'First', "last" => 'Last' } ``` The behavior with `symbolize_keys` and `stringify_keys` is unchanged. See [#152](https://github.com/intridea/hashie/pull/152) for more information.