Hey,
      You can have constants defined in a file called constants.rb in your 
initializers folder.

DIFFICULTIES = { "Easy" => 0, "Normal" => 1, "Hard" => 2 , 
0=>"Easy",1=>"Normal", 2=>"Hard"}

This will help you to get your values both ways easily.


On Saturday, 26 January 2013 18:28:36 UTC+5:30, Linus Pettersson wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> I have a model which has a field that can have three values only. I store 
> the value in the database as an integer, 0, 1 or 2, but when I display it I 
> want a more appropriate text. And, I want it to be translatable using i18n.
>
> Let's say that it corresponds to how difficult something is. So, 0 
> represents "Easy", 1 represents "Normal" and 2 represents "Hard".
> What I did was first to define it as a hash like this:
> DIFFICULTIES = { "Easy" => 0, "Normal" => 1, "Hard" => 2 }
> Then I can easily pass this to, for instance, simple_form and it will 
> generate a nice dropdown with the correct values.
>
> But let's say that I have the value and want to display the text. Then I'd 
> have to iterate over the hash to find which key corresponds to the right 
> value. Right? Not that big of an issue when there are three values as in 
> this example, but there could be more.
>
> How do you normally handle these cases? Is there any "best practice" to 
> handle this in an efficient manner?
>
> Cheers,
> Linus
>

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