QWeb monetary widget uses the precision of the currency to know the number of
digits to display on a price. The number of digits is based on log10(rounding).
For currency with rounding different than 10^x (e.g. in Switzerland 0.05
to allow 5 cents coins only), the number of displayed digits should be rounded
up. e.g. log10(0.05) is -1.3, rounded up to 2 digits.
Fixes#3233
This is safer to avoid inadvertently dropping customizations,
and does not impact the normal update/uninstall process, which
is based on the dependency order.
Creating custom fields would crash on a model that has a related field without
string. The crash was caused by the field not being set up, and method
BaseModel._field_create() violating a non-null constraint on the field string.
This has been fixed by setting up fields before updating ir_model_fields.
Deleting a custom field could also cause trouble when that field is inherited
in a child model. In that case, the registry was simply no longer consistent.
The fix is to reload completely the registry.
The modification of custom fields was not reflected on field objects. The fix
applies changes on fields before updating columns accordingly.
The old-api model._all_columns contains information about model._columns and
inherited columns. This dictionary is missing new-api computed non-stored
fields, and the new field objects provide a more readable api...
This commit contains the following changes:
- adapt several methods of BaseModel to use fields instead of columns and
_all_columns
- copy all semantic-free attributes of related fields from their source
- add attribute 'group_operator' on integer and float fields
- base, base_action_rule, crm, edi, hr, mail, mass_mailing, pad,
payment_acquirer, share, website, website_crm, website_mail: simply use
_fields instead of _all_columns
- base, decimal_precision, website: adapt qweb rendering methods to use fields
instead of columns
Add rounding_method parameter on float_round method to offer
HALF-UP (default, usual round) or UP (ceiling) rounding method.
Use the second method instead of math.ceil() for product
reservations.
For UP, the python math.ceil() method uses "torwards infinity"
rounding method while we want "away from zero".
Therefore we use the absolute value of normalized_value to make
sure than -1.8 is rounded to -2.0 and not -1.
Fixes#1125#2793
This is a cherry-pick of d4972ff which was reverted at 333852e due
to remaining issue with negative values.
In some cases (e.g. with record rules), the name_get might not have access
to the parent name. Therefore a parent_name related field solves the
issue (as it read with as superuser).
Compute methods could give results that should not be considered as default
values. For instance, a related field usually defaults to a null value, which
is then set to the field with its inverse method by create(). This may violate
a non-null constraint if the original field is required. Therefore, compute
methods are no longer used to determine default values.
Rev f2cf6ced1 modified RFC2822 parsing in order to better support
unicode characters inside the Name part of an address header.
However the patch broke handling of multiple addresses (comma
separated) - silently discarding all recipients except the
first one, as soon as any non-ASCII character was present.
This patch restores the functionality while preserving the
fix from f2cf6ced1, and simplifies the code using email.utils
utility functions.
Fixes (again) lp:1272610, OPW 607683
This solves a subtle issue: in the following case, the class Bar should
override the default value set by Foo. But in practice it was not working,
because _defaults is looked up before field.default.
class Foo(models.Model):
_name = 'foo'
_columns = {
'foo': fields.char('Foo'),
}
_defaults = {
'foo': "Foo",
}
class Bar(models.Model):
_inherit = 'foo'
foo = fields.Char(default="Bar")
The change makes field.default and the model's _defaults consistent with each
other.
also fix the corresponding text and add explicit sequence number because I
don't understand what the bloody hell it does without that, except that it's
not the right thing. At all.