DO NOT READ THIS FILE ON GITHUB, GUIDES ARE PUBLISHED ON https://guides.rubyonrails.org.
After reading this guide, you will know:
- What Action View is and how to use it with Rails.
- How best to use templates, partials, and layouts.
- What helpers are provided by Action View.
- How to use localized views.
In Rails, web requests are handled by Action Controller and Action View. Typically, Action Controller is concerned with communicating with the database and performing CRUD actions where necessary. Action View is then responsible for compiling the response.
Action View templates are written using embedded Ruby in tags mingled with HTML. To avoid cluttering the templates with boilerplate code, a number of helper classes provide common behavior for forms, dates, and strings. It's also easy to add new helpers to your application as it evolves.
NOTE: Some features of Action View are tied to Active Record, but that doesn't mean Action View depends on Active Record. Action View is an independent package that can be used with any sort of Ruby libraries.
For each controller there is an associated directory in the app/views
directory which holds the template files that make up the views associated with that controller. These files are used to display the view that results from each controller action.
Let's take a look at what Rails does by default when creating a new resource using the scaffold generator:
$ rails generate scaffold article
[...]
invoke scaffold_controller
create app/controllers/articles_controller.rb
invoke erb
create app/views/articles
create app/views/articles/index.html.erb
create app/views/articles/edit.html.erb
create app/views/articles/show.html.erb
create app/views/articles/new.html.erb
create app/views/articles/_form.html.erb
[...]
There is a naming convention for views in Rails. Typically, the views share their name with the associated controller action, as you can see above.
For example, the index controller action of the articles_controller.rb
will use the index.html.erb
view file in the app/views/articles
directory.
The complete HTML returned to the client is composed of a combination of this ERB file, a layout template that wraps it, and all the partials that the view may reference. Within this guide you will find more detailed documentation about each of these three components.
As mentioned, the final HTML output is a composition of three Rails elements: Templates
, Partials
and Layouts
.
Below is a brief overview of each of them.
Action View templates can be written in several ways. If the template file has a .erb
extension then it uses a mixture of ERB (Embedded Ruby) and HTML. If the template file has a .builder
extension then the Builder::XmlMarkup
library is used.
Rails supports multiple template systems and uses a file extension to distinguish amongst them. For example, an HTML file using the ERB template system will have .html.erb
as a file extension.
Within an ERB template, Ruby code can be included using both <% %>
and <%= %>
tags. The <% %>
tags are used to execute Ruby code that does not return anything, such as conditions, loops, or blocks, and the <%= %>
tags are used when you want output.
Consider the following loop for names:
<h1>Names of all the people</h1>
<% @people.each do |person| %>
Name: <%= person.name %><br>
<% end %>
The loop is set up using regular embedding tags (<% %>
) and the name is inserted using the output embedding tags (<%= %>
). Note that this is not just a usage suggestion: regular output functions such as print
and puts
won't be rendered to the view with ERB templates. So this would be wrong:
<%# WRONG %>
Hi, Mr. <% puts "Frodo" %>
To suppress leading and trailing whitespaces, you can use <%-
-%>
interchangeably with <%
and %>
.
Builder templates are a more programmatic alternative to ERB. They are especially useful for generating XML content. An XmlMarkup object named xml
is automatically made available to templates with a .builder
extension.
Here are some basic examples:
xml.em("emphasized")
xml.em { xml.b("emph & bold") }
xml.a("A Link", "href" => "http://rubyonrails.org")
xml.target("name" => "compile", "option" => "fast")
which would produce:
<em>emphasized</em>
<em><b>emph & bold</b></em>
<a href="http://rubyonrails.org">A link</a>
<target option="fast" name="compile" />
Any method with a block will be treated as an XML markup tag with nested markup in the block. For example, the following:
xml.div {
xml.h1(@person.name)
xml.p(@person.bio)
}
would produce something like:
<div>
<h1>David Heinemeier Hansson</h1>
<p>A product of Danish Design during the Winter of '79...</p>
</div>
Below is a full-length RSS example actually used on Basecamp:
xml.rss("version" => "2.0", "xmlns:dc" => "http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/") do
xml.channel do
xml.title(@feed_title)
xml.link(@url)
xml.description "Basecamp: Recent items"
xml.language "en-us"
xml.ttl "40"
for item in @recent_items
xml.item do
xml.title(item_title(item))
xml.description(item_description(item)) if item_description(item)
xml.pubDate(item_pubDate(item))
xml.guid(@person.firm.account.url + @recent_items.url(item))
xml.link(@person.firm.account.url + @recent_items.url(item))
xml.tag!("dc:creator", item.author_name) if item_has_creator?(item)
end
end
end
end
Jbuilder is a gem that's
maintained by the Rails team and included in the default Rails Gemfile
.
It's similar to Builder, but is used to generate JSON, instead of XML.
If you don't have it, you can add the following to your Gemfile
:
gem 'jbuilder'
A Jbuilder object named json
is automatically made available to templates with
a .jbuilder
extension.
Here is a basic example:
json.name("Alex")
json.email("[email protected]")
would produce:
{
"name": "Alex",
"email": "[email protected]"
}
See the Jbuilder documentation for more examples and information.
By default, Rails will compile each template to a method in order to render it. When you alter a template, Rails will check the file's modification time and recompile it in development mode.
Partial templates - usually just called "partials" - are another device for breaking the rendering process into more manageable chunks. With partials, you can extract pieces of code from your templates to separate files and also reuse them throughout your templates.
To render a partial as part of a view, you use the render
method within the view:
<%= render "menu" %>
This will render a file named _menu.html.erb
at that point within the view that is being rendered. Note the leading underscore character: partials are named with a leading underscore to distinguish them from regular views, even though they are referred to without the underscore. This holds true even when you're pulling in a partial from another folder:
<%= render "shared/menu" %>
That code will pull in the partial from app/views/shared/_menu.html.erb
.
One way to use partials is to treat them as the equivalent of subroutines; a way to move details out of a view so that you can grasp what's going on more easily. For example, you might have a view that looks like this:
<%= render "shared/ad_banner" %>
<h1>Products</h1>
<p>Here are a few of our fine products:</p>
<% @products.each do |product| %>
<%= render partial: "product", locals: { product: product } %>
<% end %>
<%= render "shared/footer" %>
Here, the _ad_banner.html.erb
and _footer.html.erb
partials could contain content that is shared among many pages in your application. You don't need to see the details of these sections when you're concentrating on a particular page.
In the above example, render
takes 2 options: partial
and locals
. But if
these are the only options you want to pass, you can skip using these options.
For example, instead of:
<%= render partial: "product", locals: { product: @product } %>
You can also do:
<%= render "product", product: @product %>
By default ActionView::Partials::PartialRenderer
has its object in a local variable with the same name as the template. So, given:
<%= render partial: "product" %>
within _product
partial we'll get @product
in the local variable product
,
as if we had written:
<%= render partial: "product", locals: { product: @product } %>
The object
option can be used to directly specify which object is rendered into the partial; useful when the template's object is elsewhere (e.g. in a different instance variable or in a local variable).
For example, instead of:
<%= render partial: "product", locals: { product: @item } %>
we would do:
<%= render partial: "product", object: @item %>
With the as
option we can specify a different name for the said local variable. For example, if we wanted it to be item
instead of product
we would do:
<%= render partial: "product", object: @item, as: "item" %>
This is equivalent to
<%= render partial: "product", locals: { item: @item } %>
It is very common that a template will need to iterate over a collection and render a sub-template for each of the elements. This pattern has been implemented as a single method that accepts an array and renders a partial for each one of the elements in the array.
So this example for rendering all the products:
<% @products.each do |product| %>
<%= render partial: "product", locals: { product: product } %>
<% end %>
can be rewritten in a single line:
<%= render partial: "product", collection: @products %>
When a partial is called with a collection, the individual instances of the partial have access to the member of the collection being rendered via a variable named after the partial. In this case, the partial is _product
, and within it you can refer to product
to get the collection member that is being rendered.
You can use a shorthand syntax for rendering collections. Assuming @products
is a collection of Product
instances, you can simply write the following to produce the same result:
<%= render @products %>
Rails determines the name of the partial to use by looking at the model name in the collection, Product
in this case. In fact, you can even render a collection made up of instances of different models using this shorthand, and Rails will choose the proper partial for each member of the collection.
You can also specify a second partial to be rendered between instances of the main partial by using the :spacer_template
option:
<%= render partial: @products, spacer_template: "product_ruler" %>
Rails will render the _product_ruler
partial (with no data passed to it) between each pair of _product
partials.
Layouts can be used to render a common view template around the results of Rails controller actions. Typically, a Rails application will have a couple of layouts that pages will be rendered within. For example, a site might have one layout for a logged in user and another for the marketing or sales side of the site. The logged in user layout might include top-level navigation that should be present across many controller actions. The sales layout for a SaaS app might include top-level navigation for things like "Pricing" and "Contact Us" pages. You would expect each layout to have a different look and feel. You can read about layouts in more detail in the Layouts and Rendering in Rails guide.
Partials can have their own layouts applied to them. These layouts are different from those applied to a controller action, but they work in a similar fashion.
Let's say we're displaying an article on a page which should be wrapped in a div
for display purposes. Firstly, we'll create a new Article
:
Article.create(body: 'Partial Layouts are cool!')
In the show
template, we'll render the _article
partial wrapped in the box
layout:
articles/show.html.erb
<%= render partial: 'article', layout: 'box', locals: { article: @article } %>
The box
layout simply wraps the _article
partial in a div
:
articles/_box.html.erb
<div class='box'>
<%= yield %>
</div>
Note that the partial layout has access to the local article
variable that was passed into the render
call. However, unlike application-wide layouts, partial layouts still have the underscore prefix.
You can also render a block of code within a partial layout instead of calling yield
. For example, if we didn't have the _article
partial, we could do this instead:
articles/show.html.erb
<% render(layout: 'box', locals: { article: @article }) do %>
<div>
<p><%= article.body %></p>
</div>
<% end %>
Supposing we use the same _box
partial from above, this would produce the same output as the previous example.
When rendering a response, the controller needs to resolve where the different
views are located. By default it only looks inside the app/views
directory.
We can add other locations and give them a certain precedence when resolving
paths using the prepend_view_path
and append_view_path
methods.
This can be helpful for example, when we want to put views inside a different directory for subdomains.
We can do this by using:
prepend_view_path "app/views/#{request.subdomain}"
Then Action View will look first in this directory when resolving views.
Similarly, we can append paths:
append_view_path "app/views/direct"
This will add app/views/direct
to the end of the lookup paths.
WIP: Not all the helpers are listed here. For a full list see the API documentation
The following is only a brief overview summary of the helpers available in Action View. It's recommended that you review the API Documentation, which covers all of the helpers in more detail, but this should serve as a good starting point.
This module provides methods for generating HTML that links views to assets such as images, JavaScript files, stylesheets, and feeds.
By default, Rails links to these assets on the current host in the public folder, but you can direct Rails to link to assets from a dedicated assets server by setting config.action_controller.asset_host
in the application configuration, typically in config/environments/production.rb
. For example, let's say your asset host is assets.example.com
:
config.action_controller.asset_host = "assets.example.com"
image_tag("rails.png") # => <img src="http://assets.example.com/images/rails.png" />
Returns a link tag that browsers and feed readers can use to auto-detect an RSS, Atom, or JSON feed.
auto_discovery_link_tag(:rss, "http://www.example.com/feed.rss", { title: "RSS Feed" }) # =>
<link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS Feed" href="http://www.example.com/feed.rss" />
Computes the path to an image asset in the app/assets/images
directory. Full paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by image_tag
to build the image path.
image_path("edit.png") # => /assets/edit.png
Fingerprint will be added to the filename if config.assets.digest is set to true.
image_path("edit.png") # => /assets/edit-2d1a2db63fc738690021fedb5a65b68e.png
Computes the URL to an image asset in the app/assets/images
directory. This will call image_path
internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
image_url("edit.png") # => http://www.example.com/assets/edit.png
Returns an HTML image tag for the source. The source can be a full path or a file that exists in your app/assets/images
directory.
image_tag("icon.png") # => <img src="/assets/icon.png" />
Returns an HTML script tag for each of the sources provided. You can pass in the filename (.js
extension is optional) of JavaScript files that exist in your app/assets/javascripts
directory for inclusion into the current page or you can pass the full path relative to your document root.
javascript_include_tag "common" # => <script src="/assets/common.js"></script>
Computes the path to a JavaScript asset in the app/assets/javascripts
directory. If the source filename has no extension, .js
will be appended. Full paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by javascript_include_tag
to build the script path.
javascript_path "common" # => /assets/common.js
Computes the URL to a JavaScript asset in the app/assets/javascripts
directory. This will call javascript_path
internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
javascript_url "common" # => http://www.example.com/assets/common.js
Returns a stylesheet link tag for the sources specified as arguments. If you don't specify an extension, .css
will be appended automatically.
stylesheet_link_tag "application" # => <link href="/assets/application.css" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" />
Computes the path to a stylesheet asset in the app/assets/stylesheets
directory. If the source filename has no extension, .css
will be appended. Full paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by stylesheet_link_tag
to build the stylesheet path.
stylesheet_path "application" # => /assets/application.css
Computes the URL to a stylesheet asset in the app/assets/stylesheets
directory. This will call stylesheet_path
internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
stylesheet_url "application" # => http://www.example.com/assets/application.css
This helper makes building an Atom feed easy. Here's a full usage example:
config/routes.rb
resources :articles
app/controllers/articles_controller.rb
def index
@articles = Article.all
respond_to do |format|
format.html
format.atom
end
end
app/views/articles/index.atom.builder
atom_feed do |feed|
feed.title("Articles Index")
feed.updated(@articles.first.created_at)
@articles.each do |article|
feed.entry(article) do |entry|
entry.title(article.title)
entry.content(article.body, type: 'html')
entry.author do |author|
author.name(article.author_name)
end
end
end
end
Allows you to measure the execution time of a block in a template and records the result to the log. Wrap this block around expensive operations or possible bottlenecks to get a time reading for the operation.
<% benchmark "Process data files" do %>
<%= expensive_files_operation %>
<% end %>
This would add something like "Process data files (0.34523)" to the log, which you can then use to compare timings when optimizing your code.
A method for caching fragments of a view rather than an entire action or page. This technique is useful for caching pieces like menus, lists of news topics, static HTML fragments, and so on. This method takes a block that contains the content you wish to cache. See AbstractController::Caching::Fragments
for more information.
<% cache do %>
<%= render "shared/footer" %>
<% end %>
The capture
method allows you to extract part of a template into a variable. You can then use this variable anywhere in your templates or layout.
<% @greeting = capture do %>
<p>Welcome! The date and time is <%= Time.now %></p>
<% end %>
The captured variable can then be used anywhere else.
<html>
<head>
<title>Welcome!</title>
</head>
<body>
<%= @greeting %>
</body>
</html>
Calling content_for
stores a block of markup in an identifier for later use. You can make subsequent calls to the stored content in other templates or the layout by passing the identifier as an argument to yield
.
For example, let's say we have a standard application layout, but also a special page that requires certain JavaScript that the rest of the site doesn't need. We can use content_for
to include this JavaScript on our special page without fattening up the rest of the site.
app/views/layouts/application.html.erb
<html>
<head>
<title>Welcome!</title>
<%= yield :special_script %>
</head>
<body>
<p>Welcome! The date and time is <%= Time.now %></p>
</body>
</html>
app/views/articles/special.html.erb
<p>This is a special page.</p>
<% content_for :special_script do %>
<script>alert('Hello!')</script>
<% end %>
Returns a set of select tags (one for year, month, and day) pre-selected for accessing a specified date-based attribute.
date_select("article", "published_on")
Returns a set of select tags (one for year, month, day, hour, and minute) pre-selected for accessing a specified datetime-based attribute.
datetime_select("article", "published_on")
Reports the approximate distance in time between two Time or Date objects or integers as seconds. Set include_seconds
to true if you want more detailed approximations.
distance_of_time_in_words(Time.now, Time.now + 15.seconds) # => less than a minute
distance_of_time_in_words(Time.now, Time.now + 15.seconds, include_seconds: true) # => less than 20 seconds
Returns a set of HTML select-tags (one for year, month, and day) pre-selected with the date
provided.
# Generates a date select that defaults to the date provided (six days after today)
select_date(Time.today + 6.days)
# Generates a date select that defaults to today (no specified date)
select_date()
Returns a set of HTML select-tags (one for year, month, day, hour, and minute) pre-selected with the datetime
provided.
# Generates a datetime select that defaults to the datetime provided (four days after today)
select_datetime(Time.now + 4.days)
# Generates a datetime select that defaults to today (no specified datetime)
select_datetime()
Returns a select tag with options for each of the days 1 through 31 with the current day selected.
# Generates a select field for days that defaults to the day for the date provided
select_day(Time.today + 2.days)
# Generates a select field for days that defaults to the number given
select_day(5)
Returns a select tag with options for each of the hours 0 through 23 with the current hour selected.
# Generates a select field for hours that defaults to the hours for the time provided
select_hour(Time.now + 6.hours)
Returns a select tag with options for each of the minutes 0 through 59 with the current minute selected.
# Generates a select field for minutes that defaults to the minutes for the time provided.
select_minute(Time.now + 10.minutes)
Returns a select tag with options for each of the months January through December with the current month selected.
# Generates a select field for months that defaults to the current month
select_month(Date.today)
Returns a select tag with options for each of the seconds 0 through 59 with the current second selected.
# Generates a select field for seconds that defaults to the seconds for the time provided
select_second(Time.now + 16.seconds)
Returns a set of HTML select-tags (one for hour and minute).
# Generates a time select that defaults to the time provided
select_time(Time.now)
Returns a select tag with options for each of the five years on each side of the current, which is selected. The five year radius can be changed using the :start_year
and :end_year
keys in the options
.
# Generates a select field for five years on either side of Date.today that defaults to the current year
select_year(Date.today)
# Generates a select field from 1900 to 2009 that defaults to the current year
select_year(Date.today, start_year: 1900, end_year: 2009)
Like distance_of_time_in_words
, but where to_time
is fixed to Time.now
.
time_ago_in_words(3.minutes.from_now) # => 3 minutes
Returns a set of select tags (one for hour, minute, and optionally second) pre-selected for accessing a specified time-based attribute. The selects are prepared for multi-parameter assignment to an Active Record object.
# Creates a time select tag that, when POSTed, will be stored in the order variable in the submitted attribute
time_select("order", "submitted")
Returns a pre
tag that has object dumped by YAML. This creates a very readable way to inspect an object.
my_hash = { 'first' => 1, 'second' => 'two', 'third' => [1,2,3] }
debug(my_hash)
<pre class='debug_dump'>---
first: 1
second: two
third:
- 1
- 2
- 3
</pre>
Form helpers are designed to make working with models much easier compared to using just standard HTML elements by providing a set of methods for creating forms based on your models. This helper generates the HTML for forms, providing a method for each sort of input (e.g., text, password, select, and so on). When the form is submitted (i.e., when the user hits the submit button or form.submit is called via JavaScript), the form inputs will be bundled into the params object and passed back to the controller.
There are two types of form helpers: those that specifically work with model attributes and those that don't. This helper deals with those that work with model attributes; to see an example of form helpers that don't work with model attributes, check the ActionView::Helpers::FormTagHelper
documentation.
The core method of this helper, form_for
, gives you the ability to create a form for a model instance; for example, let's say that you have a model Person and want to create a new instance of it:
# Note: a @person variable will have been created in the controller (e.g. @person = Person.new)
<%= form_for @person, url: { action: "create" } do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :first_name %>
<%= f.text_field :last_name %>
<%= submit_tag 'Create' %>
<% end %>
The HTML generated for this would be:
<form class="new_person" id="new_person" action="/people" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post">
<input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="✓" />
<input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="lTuvBzs7ANygT0NFinXj98tfw3Emfm65wwYLbUvoWsK2pngccIQSUorM2C035M9dZswXgWTvKwFS8W5TVblpYw==" />
<input type="text" name="person[first_name]" id="person_first_name" />
<input type="text" name="person[last_name]" id="person_last_name" />
<input type="submit" name="commit" value="Create" data-disable-with="Create" />
</form>
The params object created when this form is submitted would look like:
{"utf8" => "✓", "authenticity_token" => "lTuvBzs7ANygT0NFinXj98tfw3Emfm65wwYLbUvoWsK2pngccIQSUorM2C035M9dZswXgWTvKwFS8W5TVblpYw==", "person" => {"first_name" => "William", "last_name" => "Smith"}, "commit" => "Create", "controller" => "people", "action" => "create"}
The params hash has a nested person value, which can therefore be accessed with params[:person]
in the controller.
Returns a checkbox tag tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
# Let's say that @article.validated? is 1:
check_box("article", "validated")
# => <input type="checkbox" id="article_validated" name="article[validated]" value="1" />
# <input name="article[validated]" type="hidden" value="0" />
Creates a scope around a specific model object like form_for
, but doesn't create the form tags themselves. This makes fields_for
suitable for specifying additional model objects in the same form:
<%= form_for @person, url: { action: "update" } do |person_form| %>
First name: <%= person_form.text_field :first_name %>
Last name : <%= person_form.text_field :last_name %>
<%= fields_for @person.permission do |permission_fields| %>
Admin? : <%= permission_fields.check_box :admin %>
<% end %>
<% end %>
Returns a file upload input tag tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
file_field(:user, :avatar)
# => <input type="file" id="user_avatar" name="user[avatar]" />
Creates a form and a scope around a specific model object that is used as a base for questioning about values for the fields.
<%= form_for @article do |f| %>
<%= f.label :title, 'Title' %>:
<%= f.text_field :title %><br>
<%= f.label :body, 'Body' %>:
<%= f.text_area :body %><br>
<% end %>
hidden_field
Returns a hidden input tag tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
hidden_field(:user, :token)
# => <input type="hidden" id="user_token" name="user[token]" value="#{@user.token}" />
Returns a label tag tailored for labelling an input field for a specified attribute.
label(:article, :title)
# => <label for="article_title">Title</label>
Returns an input tag of the "password" type tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
password_field(:login, :pass)
# => <input type="text" id="login_pass" name="login[pass]" value="#{@login.pass}" />
Returns a radio button tag for accessing a specified attribute.
# Let's say that @article.category returns "rails":
radio_button("article", "category", "rails")
radio_button("article", "category", "java")
# => <input type="radio" id="article_category_rails" name="article[category]" value="rails" checked="checked" />
# <input type="radio" id="article_category_java" name="article[category]" value="java" />
Returns a textarea opening and closing tag set tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
text_area(:comment, :text, size: "20x30")
# => <textarea cols="20" rows="30" id="comment_text" name="comment[text]">
# #{@comment.text}
# </textarea>
Returns an input tag of the "text" type tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
text_field(:article, :title)
# => <input type="text" id="article_title" name="article[title]" value="#{@article.title}" />
Returns an input tag of the "email" type tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
email_field(:user, :email)
# => <input type="email" id="user_email" name="user[email]" value="#{@user.email}" />
Returns an input tag of the "url" type tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
url_field(:user, :url)
# => <input type="url" id="user_url" name="user[url]" value="#{@user.url}" />
Provides a number of methods for turning different kinds of containers into a set of option tags.
Returns select
and option
tags for the collection of existing return values of method
for object
's class.
Example object structure for use with this method:
class Article < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :author
end
class Author < ApplicationRecord
has_many :articles
def name_with_initial
"#{first_name.first}. #{last_name}"
end
end
Sample usage (selecting the associated Author for an instance of Article, @article
):
collection_select(:article, :author_id, Author.all, :id, :name_with_initial, { prompt: true })
If @article.author_id
is 1, this would return:
<select name="article[author_id]">
<option value="">Please select</option>
<option value="1" selected="selected">D. Heinemeier Hansson</option>
<option value="2">D. Thomas</option>
<option value="3">M. Clark</option>
</select>
Returns radio_button
tags for the collection of existing return values of method
for object
's class.
Example object structure for use with this method:
class Article < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :author
end
class Author < ApplicationRecord
has_many :articles
def name_with_initial
"#{first_name.first}. #{last_name}"
end
end
Sample usage (selecting the associated Author for an instance of Article, @article
):
collection_radio_buttons(:article, :author_id, Author.all, :id, :name_with_initial)
If @article.author_id
is 1, this would return:
<input id="article_author_id_1" name="article[author_id]" type="radio" value="1" checked="checked" />
<label for="article_author_id_1">D. Heinemeier Hansson</label>
<input id="article_author_id_2" name="article[author_id]" type="radio" value="2" />
<label for="article_author_id_2">D. Thomas</label>
<input id="article_author_id_3" name="article[author_id]" type="radio" value="3" />
<label for="article_author_id_3">M. Clark</label>
Returns check_box
tags for the collection of existing return values of method
for object
's class.
Example object structure for use with this method:
class Article < ApplicationRecord
has_and_belongs_to_many :authors
end
class Author < ApplicationRecord
has_and_belongs_to_many :articles
def name_with_initial
"#{first_name.first}. #{last_name}"
end
end
Sample usage (selecting the associated Authors for an instance of Article, @article
):
collection_check_boxes(:article, :author_ids, Author.all, :id, :name_with_initial)
If @article.author_ids
is [1], this would return:
<input id="article_author_ids_1" name="article[author_ids][]" type="checkbox" value="1" checked="checked" />
<label for="article_author_ids_1">D. Heinemeier Hansson</label>
<input id="article_author_ids_2" name="article[author_ids][]" type="checkbox" value="2" />
<label for="article_author_ids_2">D. Thomas</label>
<input id="article_author_ids_3" name="article[author_ids][]" type="checkbox" value="3" />
<label for="article_author_ids_3">M. Clark</label>
<input name="article[author_ids][]" type="hidden" value="" />
Returns a string of option
tags, like options_from_collection_for_select
, but groups them by optgroup
tags based on the object relationships of the arguments.
Example object structure for use with this method:
class Continent < ApplicationRecord
has_many :countries
# attribs: id, name
end
class Country < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :continent
# attribs: id, name, continent_id
end
Sample usage:
option_groups_from_collection_for_select(@continents, :countries, :name, :id, :name, 3)
Possible output:
<optgroup label="Africa">
<option value="1">Egypt</option>
<option value="4">Rwanda</option>
...
</optgroup>
<optgroup label="Asia">
<option value="3" selected="selected">China</option>
<option value="12">India</option>
<option value="5">Japan</option>
...
</optgroup>
NOTE: Only the optgroup
and option
tags are returned, so you still have to wrap the output in an appropriate select
tag.
Accepts a container (hash, array, enumerable, your type) and returns a string of option tags.
options_for_select([ "VISA", "MasterCard" ])
# => <option>VISA</option> <option>MasterCard</option>
NOTE: Only the option
tags are returned, you have to wrap this call in a regular HTML select
tag.
Returns a string of option tags that have been compiled by iterating over the collection
and assigning the result of a call to the value_method
as the option value and the text_method
as the option text.
# options_from_collection_for_select(collection, value_method, text_method, selected = nil)
For example, imagine a loop iterating over each person in @project.people
to generate an input tag:
options_from_collection_for_select(@project.people, "id", "name")
# => <option value="#{person.id}">#{person.name}</option>
NOTE: Only the option
tags are returned, you have to wrap this call in a regular HTML select
tag.
Create a select tag and a series of contained option tags for the provided object and method.
Example:
select("article", "person_id", Person.all.collect { |p| [ p.name, p.id ] }, { include_blank: true })
If @article.person_id
is 1, this would become:
<select name="article[person_id]">
<option value=""></option>
<option value="1" selected="selected">David</option>
<option value="2">Eileen</option>
<option value="3">Rafael</option>
</select>
Returns a string of option tags for pretty much any time zone in the world.
Returns select and option tags for the given object and method, using time_zone_options_for_select
to generate the list of option tags.
time_zone_select("user", "time_zone")
Returns an input tag of the "date" type tailored for accessing a specified attribute.
date_field("user", "dob")
Provides a number of methods for creating form tags that don't rely on an Active Record object assigned to the template like FormHelper does. Instead, you provide the names and values manually.
Creates a check box form input tag.
check_box_tag 'accept'
# => <input id="accept" name="accept" type="checkbox" value="1" />
Creates a field set for grouping HTML form elements.
<%= field_set_tag do %>
<p><%= text_field_tag 'name' %></p>
<% end %>
# => <fieldset><p><input id="name" name="name" type="text" /></p></fieldset>
Creates a file upload field.
<%= form_tag({ action: "post" }, multipart: true) do %>
<label for="file">File to Upload</label> <%= file_field_tag "file" %>
<%= submit_tag %>
<% end %>
Example output:
file_field_tag 'attachment'
# => <input id="attachment" name="attachment" type="file" />
Starts a form tag that points the action to a URL configured with url_for_options
just like ActionController::Base#url_for
.
<%= form_tag '/articles' do %>
<div><%= submit_tag 'Save' %></div>
<% end %>
# => <form action="/articles" method="post"><div><input type="submit" name="submit" value="Save" /></div></form>
hidden_field_tag
Creates a hidden form input field used to transmit data that would be lost due to HTTP's statelessness or data that should be hidden from the user.
hidden_field_tag 'token', 'VUBJKB23UIVI1UU1VOBVI@'
# => <input id="token" name="token" type="hidden" value="VUBJKB23UIVI1UU1VOBVI@" />
Displays an image which when clicked will submit the form.
image_submit_tag("login.png")
# => <input src="/images/login.png" type="image" />
Creates a label field.
label_tag 'name'
# => <label for="name">Name</label>
Creates a password field, a masked text field that will hide the users input behind a mask character.
password_field_tag 'pass'
# => <input id="pass" name="pass" type="password" />
Creates a radio button; use groups of radio buttons named the same to allow users to select from a group of options.
radio_button_tag 'favorite_color', 'maroon'
# => <input id="favorite_color_maroon" name="favorite_color" type="radio" value="maroon" />
Creates a dropdown selection box.
select_tag "people", "<option>David</option>"
# => <select id="people" name="people"><option>David</option></select>
Creates a submit button with the text provided as the caption.
submit_tag "Publish this article"
# => <input name="commit" type="submit" value="Publish this article" />
Creates a text input area; use a textarea for longer text inputs such as blog posts or descriptions.
text_area_tag 'article'
# => <textarea id="article" name="article"></textarea>
Creates a standard text field; use these text fields to input smaller chunks of text like a username or a search query.
text_field_tag 'name'
# => <input id="name" name="name" type="text" />
Creates a standard input field of email type.
email_field_tag 'email'
# => <input id="email" name="email" type="email" />
Creates a standard input field of url type.
url_field_tag 'url'
# => <input id="url" name="url" type="url" />
Creates a standard input field of date type.
date_field_tag "dob"
# => <input id="dob" name="dob" type="date" />
Provides functionality for working with JavaScript in your views.
Escape carrier returns and single and double quotes for JavaScript segments.
Returns a JavaScript tag wrapping the provided code.
javascript_tag "alert('All is good')"
<script>
//<![CDATA[
alert('All is good')
//]]>
</script>
Provides methods for converting numbers into formatted strings. Methods are provided for phone numbers, currency, percentage, precision, positional notation, and file size.
Formats a number into a currency string (e.g., $13.65).
number_to_currency(1234567890.50) # => $1,234,567,890.50
Formats the bytes in size into a more understandable representation; useful for reporting file sizes to users.
number_to_human_size(1234) # => 1.2 KB
number_to_human_size(1234567) # => 1.2 MB
Formats a number as a percentage string.
number_to_percentage(100, precision: 0) # => 100%
Formats a number into a phone number (US by default).
number_to_phone(1235551234) # => 123-555-1234
Formats a number with grouped thousands using a delimiter.
number_with_delimiter(12345678) # => 12,345,678
Formats a number with the specified level of precision
, which defaults to 3.
number_with_precision(111.2345) # => 111.235
number_with_precision(111.2345, precision: 2) # => 111.23
The SanitizeHelper module provides a set of methods for scrubbing text of undesired HTML elements.
This sanitize helper will HTML encode all tags and strip all attributes that aren't specifically allowed.
sanitize @article.body
If either the :attributes
or :tags
options are passed, only the mentioned attributes and tags are allowed and nothing else.
sanitize @article.body, tags: %w(table tr td), attributes: %w(id class style)
To change defaults for multiple uses, for example adding table tags to the default:
class Application < Rails::Application
config.action_view.sanitized_allowed_tags = 'table', 'tr', 'td'
end
Sanitizes a block of CSS code.
Strips all link tags from text leaving just the link text.
strip_links('<a href="http://rubyonrails.org">Ruby on Rails</a>')
# => Ruby on Rails
strip_links('emails to <a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>.')
# => emails to [email protected].
strip_links('Blog: <a href="http://myblog.com/">Visit</a>.')
# => Blog: Visit.
Strips all HTML tags from the html, including comments. This functionality is powered by the rails-html-sanitizer gem.
strip_tags("Strip <i>these</i> tags!")
# => Strip these tags!
strip_tags("<b>Bold</b> no more! <a href='more.html'>See more</a>")
# => Bold no more! See more
NB: The output may still contain unescaped '<', '>', '&' characters and confuse browsers.
Returns meta tags "csrf-param" and "csrf-token" with the name of the cross-site request forgery protection parameter and token, respectively.
<%= csrf_meta_tags %>
NOTE: Regular forms generate hidden fields so they do not use these tags. More details can be found in the Rails Security Guide.
Action View has the ability to render different templates depending on the current locale.
For example, suppose you have an ArticlesController
with a show action. By default, calling this action will render app/views/articles/show.html.erb
. But if you set I18n.locale = :de
, then app/views/articles/show.de.html.erb
will be rendered instead. If the localized template isn't present, the undecorated version will be used. This means you're not required to provide localized views for all cases, but they will be preferred and used if available.
You can use the same technique to localize the rescue files in your public directory. For example, setting I18n.locale = :de
and creating public/500.de.html
and public/404.de.html
would allow you to have localized rescue pages.
Since Rails doesn't restrict the symbols that you use to set I18n.locale, you can leverage this system to display different content depending on anything you like. For example, suppose you have some "expert" users that should see different pages from "normal" users. You could add the following to app/controllers/application.rb
:
before_action :set_expert_locale
def set_expert_locale
I18n.locale = :expert if current_user.expert?
end
Then you could create special views like app/views/articles/show.expert.html.erb
that would only be displayed to expert users.
You can read more about the Rails Internationalization (I18n) API here.