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jcnetdev-paperclip

v1.1RubyGems· Ruby

Paperclip is intended as an easy file attachment library for ActiveRecord. The intent behind it was to keep setup as easy as possible and to treat files as much like other attributes as possible. This means they aren't saved to their final locations on disk, nor are they deleted if set to nil, until ActiveRecord::Base#save is called. It manages validations based on size and presence, if required. It can transform its assigned image into thumbnails if needed, and the prerequisites are as simple as installing ImageMagick (which, for most modern Unix-based systems, is as easy as installing the right packages). Attached files are saved to the filesystem and referenced in the browser by an easily understandable specification, which has sensible and useful defaults.

The verdict
Abandoned. Last published 11 years ago. No recent activity — look for a maintained alternative.
No recent activity — look for a maintained alternative.
Live from the RubyGems registry · derived rules, not AI
How it scores
MaintenanceAbandoned
PopularityNiche
SecurityClean
LicenseUnknown
DepsZero deps
Maintenance
Last published 11 years ago.
Popularity
6 downloads / week
Security
No known advisories for this version (OSV).
License
No license declared.
Dependencies
No runtime dependencies
Recent releases
  • 1.0.2008070411 years ago
  • 1.111 years ago
jcnetdev-paperclip — Paperclip is intended as an easy file attachment library for ActiveRecord. The intent behind it was to keep setup as easy as possible and to treat files as much like other attributes as possible. This means they aren't saved to their final locations on disk, nor are they deleted if set to nil, until ActiveRecord::Base#save is called. It manages validations based on size and presence, if required. It can transform its assigned image into thumbnails if needed, and the prerequisites are as simple as installing ImageMagick (which, for most modern Unix-based systems, is as easy as installing the right packages). Attached files are saved to the filesystem and referenced in the browser by an easily understandable specification, which has sensible and useful defaults. (Ruby / RubyGems) · Modules