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Home/ Questions/Q 6000563
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T00:42:40+00:00 2026-05-23T00:42:40+00:00

I have a model called Feature with a variable called body_string , which contains

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I have a model called Feature with a variable called body_string, which contains HTML markup I’d like to render, rather than escape.

Every time I reference body_string in my views, I need to use <%=raw or .html_safe. This seems redundant and not-so-DRY.

Is there any way that I can establish once-and-for-all the body_string variable as html_safe?

I’m assuming this would happen in the app/models/feature.rb file, but I can’t figure out what the right syntax would be, exactly. I’ve thought of this:

def body_string
  return self.body_string.html_safe
end

But Rails doesn’t like it; it raises a stack level too deep exception.

Naturally I could define a variable/method with a different name:

def safe_body_string
  return self.body_string.html_safe
end

And then just change all references in the views from body_string to safe_body_string. But somehow this seems almost as un-DRY as simply using raw or .html_safe in the first place.

Any insights to how best to handle this? I feel like there must be something really elegant that I’m just not seeing.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T00:42:41+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 12:42 am

    Just use read_attribute to avoid the recursive call to body_string:

    def body_string
      read_attribute(:body_string).html_safe
    end
    

    read_attribute is complemented by write_attribute for setting attributes from within your model.

    A note on style: Don’t use explicit returns unless you actually need them. The result of the last statement in a method is implicitly the value returned from the method.

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