The new CSV report was more configurable and could work on proposals,
processes and comments. However, it had several issues.
In the public area, by default it generated a blank file.
In the admin section, the report was hard to configure and it generated
a file with less quality than the old system.
So until we improve this system, we're bringing back the old investment
CSV exporter.
This commit reverts most of commit 9d1ca3bf.
We were very inconsistent regarding these rules.
Personally I prefer no empty lines around blocks, clases, etc... as
recommended by the Ruby style guide [1], and they're the default values
in rubocop, so those are the settings I'm applying.
The exception is the `private` access modifier, since we were leaving
empty lines around it most of the time. That's the default rubocop rule
as well. Personally I don't have a strong preference about this one.
[1] https://rubystyle.guide/#empty-lines-around-bodies
Having exceptions is better than having silent bugs.
There are a few methods I've kept the same way they were.
The `RelatedContentScore#score_with_opposite` method is a bit peculiar:
it creates scores for both itself and the opposite related content,
which means the opposite related content will try to create the same
scores as well.
We've already got a test to check `Budget::Ballot#add_investment` when
creating a line fails ("Edge case voting a non-elegible investment").
Finally, the method `User#send_oauth_confirmation_instructions` doesn't
update the record when the email address isn't already present, leading
to the test "Try to register with the email of an already existing user,
when an unconfirmed email was provided by oauth" fo fail if we raise an
exception for an invalid user. That's because updating a user's email
doesn't update the database automatically, but instead a confirmation
email is sent.
There are also a few false positives for classes which don't have bang
methods (like the GraphQL classes) or destroying attachments.
For these reasons, I'm adding the rule with a "Refactor" severity,
meaning it's a rule we can break if necessary.
* Adapt translatable spec helper method to work with budget investments
* Remove old attributes from strong parameters
* Add missing locales to admin.yml and budgets.yml
* Change SpendingProposal.title_max_length and
SpendingProposal.description_max_lenght to Budget::Investment methods
* Add budget investment translatable attribute translations
There were some custom routes created using the param[:id] but the
Rails routes use the param[:budget_id] by default, so the same
controller could be asked for different param keys.
It will make it far easier to call other methods on the stats object,
and we're already caching the methods.
We had to remove the view fragment caching because the stats object
isn't as easy to cache. The good thing about it is the view will
automatically be updated when we change logic regarding which stats to
show, and the methods taking long to execute are cached in the model.
Note that we are relying on the existing `sort_by_name`[1] method in the `Budget::Heading` class.
This method sorts by DESC group name first and then ASC heading name.
[1] https://github.com/AyuntamientoMadrid/consul/pull/1875
Some queries were accessing original column instead of the new
translatable one. This should have been causing unexpected behavior
for requests maded in a different locale than the application default.
We were showing only the ones being shown in the current page because
we were modifying `@investments` using a method which used
`@investments`, and we were calling that method twice.
There are many possible solutions: using a local variable to store the
result of the `investments` method, modifying `@investments` after
modifying `@investments_map_coordinates`, ... I've used the one which in
my humble opinion is a bit less fragile: not using `@investments` inside
the `investments` method. That way, the `investments` method will always
return the same result.
Note `stub_const("Budgets::InvestmentsController::PER_PAGE", 2)`
wouldn't work because `Budgets::InvestmentsController` isn't loaded when
that line is executed. So we need to load it. Instead of requiring the
file, using `#{Budgets::InvestmentsController}` seems to be an easier
solution.
We were filtering by winners investments for finished budget without
having in consideration other filters.
We want the default filter to be `winners` for finished budgets.
To make it more consistent with the rest of the Admin panel,
the CRUD for budget groups and headings has been changed
from the old "all-in-one" form to a separate form for each resource.
Generalize the BudgetInvestmentStatus model to Milestone::Status so it
is not specific to budget investments, but can be used for any entity
which has milestones. This is in preparation to make the Milestone
model polymorphic and usable by entities other than budget investments.
We were getting an exception when quering[1] for milestones which were not present, due to for example having a publication date later than today
Adding a `try` statement and spec to avoid this situation
[1] 82efc3dd66/app/controllers/budgets/executions_controller.rb (L16)