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Home/ Questions/Q 1106327
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T01:46:33+00:00 2026-05-17T01:46:33+00:00

I published an article on disabling ActiveModel callbacks , but I’m not completely sure

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I published an article on disabling ActiveModel callbacks, but I’m not completely sure this is the prettiest way to do something like this.

Mongoid::Timestamps adds a before save callback that updates the updated_at field. Let’s say I don’t want that in some cases and I disable the callback like this:

class User
  # I'm using Mongoid, but this should work for anything based on 
  # ActiveModel.
  include Mongoid::Document
  include Mongoid::Timestamps

  def sneaky_update(attributes)
    User.skip_callback(:save, :before, :set_updated_at)
    User.update_attributes(attributes)
    User.set_callback(:save, :before, :set_updated_at)
  end

end

Is calling skip_callback followed by set_callback to set the removed callback again a bad idea? How would you do this? 🙂

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T01:46:33+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 1:46 am

    How about this?

    module Mongoid
      module Timestamps
        attr_accessor :skip_updated_at
    
        def set_updated_at_new
          unless self.skip_updated_at
            set_updated_at_org
          end
        end
    
        alias set_updated_at_org set_updated_at
        alias set_updated_at set_updated_at_new
      end
    end
    
    class User
      # I'm using Mongoid, but this should work for anything based on 
      # ActiveModel.
      include Mongoid::Document
      include Mongoid::Timestamps
    
      def sneaky_update(attributes)
        self.skip_updated_at = true
        User.update_attributes(attributes)
        self.skip_updated_at = false
      end
    
    end
    
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