When using a boolean attribute, often you want to insure that it has a value that is either false or true, but not null. One would think that "validates_presence_of :boolean_attribute" would work for such a purpose, but it does not, because false.blank? => true. I''m guessing this is the expected behavior, but I''m wondering about the rationale. blank? would imply the lack of data (empty sets, nils), but false is a value with a particular meaning, so having false.blank? => true doesn''t make sense to me. Am I missing something? This isn''t really a big deal, as you can use "validates_inclusion_of :boolean_attribute, :in=>[false, true]", but validates_presence_of would make more sense (to me). Jeremy