We're reading the value from the database, but the
`ApplicationMailer.default` method is evaluated when the application is
started. So if we don't use a Proc, we'll need to restart the server
every time we change the value in the database, or else the old value
will still be used.
Using a Proc makes sure the mailer from address is evaluated at runtime,
so emails are sent using the from address currently defined in the
database.
The same situation took place using the devise mailer. Now we don't need
to check for the settings table being present because the Proc in the
devise initializer won't be evaluated before the settings table is
created and populated.
The dates are saved on UTC times on the database. So, for example,
if living in West Australia, `Date.current.beginning_of_day` will be
stored as UTC's yesterday at 15:15:00, while `Date.current.end_of_day`
will be stored as UTC's today at 15:14:59.
When we use the `DATE` database function, PostgreSQL will select the
records with the same UTC date as the current UTC date. However, we need
the records with the same application date (as defined in
`config.time_zone`) as the current application date. The test passed
(for us) because we were using `beginning_of_day + 3.hours` to make sure
we were creating records when the date in Madrid was the same as the UTC
date.
Using a ruby interval for the time condition solves the problem.
The label text was always in English, and it wasn't associated with any
input field.
The `SecureRandom` part is a quick hack so we don't get duplicate IDs.
Using "your_answer_#{question.id}" might work as well, but right now I'm
not sure if the form is sometimes rendered twice for the same question.
The statement executed the method twice if the `present?` condition was
true. If the condition was false, it executed it once anyway.
It's probably a typo and originally we probably meant we wanted to
execute the method if the method existed.
We're moving the code for the phases translation class to the same place
in the code the other translation classes are: right after including the
Globalizable module.
Not wrapping the editor in a `.ckeditor` div made it change height when
the editor was loaded. That caused a weird effect for users, and also
made some tests fail sometimes since the position of the "Add new
document" link might change right when capybara is clicking it.
This number was not the important one; the important one is the one
given by the recounts.
Note we're also removing the votes by date, since they're also system
votes.
System count isn't a relevant number because the important one is the
number of votes counted by poll officers. We're still maintaining it for
a month in case poll officers would like to review the results.
We forgot to add these changes to pull requests which were in
development before we upgraded to Rails 5.
We're also moving the rubocop rules to the basic files, so we're
notified when we inherit from `ActiveRecord::Base`.
- Add :date_of_birth and :postal_code
- Only display new fields when aplication has configured the Remote
Census API and contains values for fields. Check with Setting Class
methods:
- force_presence_date_of_birth?
- force_presence_postal_code?
- Add new translations on SignatureSheet show page.
Changes:
-> "document number" to "sigantures"
-> "documents" to "users"
- Remove unused translations from the others yml
- Display help text and example text according to
remote census configuration:
Examples with expecte results:
* With remote census without :date_of_birth and :postal_code:
-> "To verify a user, your application needs: Document number"
-> "Required fields for each user must be separated by commas and
each user must be separated by semicolons."
-> "Example: 12345678Z; 87654321Y"
* With remote census with :date_of_birth required:
-> "To verify a user, your application needs: Document number,
Day of birth (dd/mm/yyyy)"
-> "Required fields for each user must be separated by commas and
each user must be separated by semicolons."
-> "Example: 12345678Z, 01/01/1980; 87654321Y, 01/02/1990"
* With remote census with :date_of_birth and :postal_code required:
-> "To verify a user, your application needs: Document number,
Day of birth (dd/mm/yyyy) and Postal Code"
-> "Required fields for each user must be separated by commas and
each user must be separated by semicolons."
-> "Example: 12345678Z, 01/01/1980, 28001; 87654321Y, 01/02/1990, 28002"
- Add the methods "parse_date_of_birth" and "parse_postal_code"
to recover the correct position of their values depending on the
configuration of the remote census.
- In the previous version, each signature was equivalent to a document
and we separated them by commas.
Now each signature may also need the fields birth date and postal code.
So we separated each signature with a semicolon and separated each of
its fields by commas.
Example old version: "12345678X, 87654321Y"
Example new version:
"12345678X, 31/12/1980, 28001; 87654321Y, 31/12/1981, 28002"
- Update translations:
"Write the numbers separated by commas (,)" to
"Write the numbers separated by semicolons (;)"
- Add :date_of_birth and :postal_code to Signature to allow send these
fields to CustomCensusAPI
- Add new model presence validates: Only validate :date_of_birth and
:postal_code presence when the application has configured Remote Census
and their alias fields has values.
This new functionality will allow to retrieve in the signature sheet
the document number, the date of birth and the postal code.
So we renamed :document_numbers to :required_fields_to_veriry to
clarify and adjust the name to its use.
- Only validate :date_of_birth and :postal_code presence when the application
has configured Custom Census and their alias fields has values.
- Only validate :year_of_birth presence when :date_of_birth is not configured
to send to Custom Census
- Add :date_of_birth and :postal_code
- Only display new fields when aplication has configured the
custom census API and contains alias values for fields. Add 2
class Setting methods to check this feature:
- force_presence_date_of_birth?
- force_presence_postal_code?