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authorMichal Papis <mpapis@niczsoft.com>2011-04-16 22:57:29 +0200
committerMichal Papis <mpapis@niczsoft.com>2011-04-16 22:57:29 +0200
commit29caa46c408257d0abde312b079ffb21425770ef (patch)
tree8054e998825e5e669c4aec22f969ab4efbcfb955
parent8c68bcf829ead305e2459c2b90850b43464ec7d7 (diff)
parent143ed7edc32f875882f972ce444c9fa8ea028326 (diff)
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Merge branch 'master' of github.com:lifo/docrails
-rw-r--r--railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile130
1 files changed, 127 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile b/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile
index 1a81920249..ab9b910270 100644
--- a/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile
+++ b/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile
@@ -20,7 +20,28 @@ Note: Some features of Action View are tied to Active Record, but that doesn't m
h3. Using Action View with Rails
-TODO...
+For each controller there is an associated directory in the <tt>app/views</tt> 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:
+
+<shell>
+$ rails generate scaffold post
+ [...]
+ invoke scaffold_controller
+ create app/controllers/posts_controller.rb
+ invoke erb
+ create app/views/posts
+ create app/views/posts/index.html.erb
+ create app/views/posts/edit.html.erb
+ create app/views/posts/show.html.erb
+ create app/views/posts/new.html.erb
+ create app/views/posts/_form.html.erb
+ [...]
+</shell>
+
+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 <tt>posts_controller.rb</tt> will use the <tt>index.html.erb</tt> view file in the <tt>app/views/posts</tt> 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. Later on this guide you can find a more detailed documentation of each one of this three components.
h3. Using Action View outside of Rails
@@ -94,9 +115,112 @@ TODO needs a screenshot? I have one - not sure where to put it.
h3. Templates, Partials and Layouts
-TODO...
+As mentioned before, the final HTML output is a composition of three Rails elements: +Templates+, +Partials+ and +Layouts+.
+Find below a brief overview of each one of them.
+
+h4. Partials
+
+Partial templates – usually just called "partials" – are another device for breaking the rendering process into more manageable chunks. With a partial, you can move the code for rendering a particular piece of a response to its own file.
+
+h5. Naming Partials
+
+To render a partial as part of a view, you use the +render+ method within the view:
+
+<ruby>
+<%= render "menu" %>
+</ruby>
+
+This will render a file named +_menu.html.erb+ at that point within the view 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:
+
+<ruby>
+<%= render "shared/menu" %>
+</ruby>
+
+That code will pull in the partial from +app/views/shared/_menu.html.erb+.
+
+h5. Using Partials to Simplify Views
+
+One way to use partials is to treat them as the equivalent of subroutines: as 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 looked like this:
+
+<erb>
+<%= 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" %>
+</erb>
+
+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.
+
+h5. The :as and :object options
+
+By default <tt>ActionView::Partials::PartialRenderer</tt> has its object in a local variable with the same name as the template. So, given
+
+<erb>
+<%= render :partial => "product" %>
+</erb>
+
+within product we'll get <tt>@product</tt> in the local variable +product+, as if we had written:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render :partial => "product", :locals => { :product => @product } %>
+</erb>
+
+With the <tt>:as</tt> option we can specify a different name for said local variable. For example, if we wanted it to be +item+ instead of product+ we'd do:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render :partial => "product", :as => 'item' %>
+</erb>
+
+The <tt>:object</tt> option can be used to directly specify which object is rendered into the partial; useful when the template's object is elsewhere, in a different ivar or in a local variable for instance.
+
+For example, instead of:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render :partial => "product", :locals => { :product => @item } %>
+</erb>
+
+you'd do:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render :partial => "product", :object => @item %>
+</erb>
+
+The <tt>:object</tt> and <tt>:as</tt> options can be used together.
+
+h5. Rendering Collections
+
+The example of partial use describes a familiar pattern where a template needs to iterate over an array 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 by the same name as the elements contained within.
+So the three-lined example for rendering all the products can be rewritten with a single line:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render :partial => "product", :collection => @products %>
+</erb>
+
+When a partial is called with a pluralized collection, then 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 the +_product+ partial, you can refer to +product+ to get the instance 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:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render @products %>
+</erb>
+
+Rails determines the name of the partial to use by looking at the model name in the collection. In fact, you can even create a heterogeneous collection and render it this way, and Rails will choose the proper partial for each member of the collection.
+
+h5. Spacer Templates
+
+You can also specify a second partial to be rendered between instances of the main partial by using the +:spacer_template+ option:
+
+<erb>
+<%= render @products, :spacer_template => "product_ruler" %>
+</erb>
-TODO see http://guides.rubyonrails.org/layouts_and_rendering.html
+Rails will render the +_product_ruler+ partial (with no data passed in to it) between each pair of +_product+ partials.
h3. Using Templates, Partials and Layouts in "The Rails Way"