A Vine voucher is really a specific type of FlatRate voucher but because
a Vine voucher can be used by mutiple enterprise, it can be considered
different enough to warrant it's own class.
It still share a lot of the behaviour of a FlatRate voucher, so to avoid
duplication, all the shared functionality have been moved to a
Vouchers::FlatRatable concern.
- presence: true is redundant since Rails 5.0 BUT applies
with new default config of
belongs_to_required_by_default to true.
Lots of files with belongs_to_required_by_default = false
(backward compatibility).
So: deleting this setting implies to adding optional: true
- added 'NOT NULL' constraints so model constraints match
with contraints on DB tables.
- corresponding migration files to match AR Models &
DB tables
- rake tasks to check corrupt data (ie: NULL/nil in id fields)
(previous commit)
- updated the todo
- presence: true is redundant since Rails 5.0 BUT applies
with new default config of
belongs_to_required_by_default to true.
Lots of files with belongs_to_required_by_default = false
(backward compatibility).
So: deleting this setting implies to adding optional: true
- added 'NOT NULL' constraints so model constraints match
with contraints on DB tables.
- corresponding migration files to match AR Models &
DB tables
- rake tasks to check corrupt data (ie: NULL/nil in id fields)
- updated the todo
This was actually shown in one place and represents a user-facing
change. But you weren't able to edit the field which means that only
very old enterprises would have had this field set and were not able to
change it anymore.
I searched au-prod and found the following values in the database:
- "Friday 31st January"
- "From 4pm, Monday 30 September"
- "From 5pm-7pm Monday"
- "Saturday 27 April 12noon"
- "January 31st/February 1st"
- "Saturday 1st February"
They seem specific to a certain order cycle and have no value as
fallback any more. Seems safe to remove.
- presence: true is redundant since Rails 5.0 BUT applies
with new default config of
belongs_to_required_by_default to true.
Lots of files with belongs_to_required_by_default = false
(backward compatibility).
So: deleting this setting implies to adding optional: true
- added 'NOT NULL' constraints so model constraints match
with contraints on DB tables.
- corresponding migration files to match AR Models &
DB tables
- rake tasks to check corrupt data (ie: NULL/nil in id fields)
- updated the todo
- presence: true is redundant since Rails 5.0 BUT applies
with new default config of
belongs_to_required_by_default to true.
Lots of files with belongs_to_required_by_default = false
(backward compatibility).
So: deleting this setting implies to adding optional: true
- added 'NOT NULL' constraints so model constraints match
with contraints on DB tables.
- corresponding migration files to match AR Models &
DB tables
- rake tasks to check corrupt data (ie: NULL/nil in id fields)
- updated the todo
- presence: true is redundant since Rails 5.0 BUT applies
with new default config of
belongs_to_required_by_default to true
Lots of files with belongs_to_required_by_default = false
(backward compatibility)
So: deleting this setting implies to adding optional: true
- added 'NOT NULL' constraints so model constraints match
with contraints on DB tables.
- updated the todo