This Rails gem helps creating forms for models with nested has_many associations.
It uses jQuery to dynamically add and remove nested associations.
- Works for arbitrarily deeply nested associations (tested up to 4 levels).
- Works with form builders like simple_form.
- Requires Ruby 1.9+ and the Rails asset pipeline.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'nested_form_fields'
And then execute:
$ bundle
In your application.js file add:
//= require nested_form_fields
Assume you have a user model with nested videos:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :videos
accepts_nested_attributes_for :videos, allow_destroy: true
end
Use the nested_fields_for
helper inside your user form to add the video fields:
= form_for @user do |f|
= f.nested_fields_for :videos do |ff|
= ff.text_field :video_title
..
Links to add and remove fields can be added using the add_nested_fields_link
and remove_nested_fields_link
helpers:
= form_for @user do |f|
= f.nested_fields_for :videos do |ff|
= ff.remove_nested_fields_link
= ff.text_field :video_title
..
= f.add_nested_fields_link :videos
Note that remove_nested_fields_link
needs to be called within the nested_fields_for
call and add_nested_fields_link
outside of it via the parent builder.
You can change the link text of remove_nested_fields_link
and add_nested_fields_link
like this:
...
ff.remove_nested_fields_link 'Remove me'
...
f.add_nested_fields_link :videos, 'Add another funtastic video'
You can add classes/attributes to the remove_nested_fields_link
and add_nested_fields_link
like this:
...
ff.remove_nested_fields_link 'Remove me', class: 'btn btn-danger', role: 'button'
...
f.add_nested_fields_link :videos, 'Add another funtastic video', class: 'btn btn-primary', role: 'button'
You can supply a block to the remove_nested_fields_link
and the add_nested_fields_link
helpers, as you can with link_to
:
= ff.remove_nested_fields_link do
Remove me %span.icon-trash
You can add a data-confirm
attribute to the remove_nested_fields_link
if you want the user to confirm whenever they remove a nested field:
= ff.remove_nested_fields_link 'Remove me', data: { confirm: 'Are you sure?' }
You can specify a custom container to add nested forms into, by supplying an id via the data-insert-into
attribute of the add_nested_fields_link
:
f.add_nested_fields_link :videos, 'Add another funtastic video', data: { insert_into: '<container_id>' }
You can change the type of the element wrapping the nested fields using the wrapper_tag
option:
= f.nested_fields_for :videos, wrapper_tag: :div do |ff|
The default wrapper element is a fieldset. To add legend element to the fieldset use:
= f.nested_fields_for :videos, legend: "Video" do |ff|
You can pass options like you would to the content_tag
method by nesting them in a :wrapper_options
hash:
= f.nested_fields_for :videos, wrapper_options: { class: 'row' } do |ff|
If you are using Rails 4 remember to add {{ NESTED_MODEL }}_attributes and the attributes to the permitted params.
If you want to destroy the nested model you should add :_destroy
and :id
.
For example:
# app/views/users/_form.haml.erb
= form_for @user do |f|
= f.nested_fields_for :videos do |ff|
= ff.remove_nested_fields_link
= ff.text_field :video_title
..
= f.add_nested_fields_link :videos
# app/controllers/users_controller
..
def user_params
params.require(:user)
.permit(:name,:email,videos_attributes:[:video_title,:_destroy,:id])
# ^^^ ^^^ ^^^
# nested model attrs
# they will let you delete the nested model
end
There are four JavaScript events firing before and after addition/removal of the fields in the nested_form_fields
namespace:
fields_adding
fields_added
fields_removing
fields_removed
The events fields_added
and fields_removed
are triggered on the element being added or removed. The events bubble up so you can listen for them on any parent element.
This makes it easy to add listeners when you have multiple nested_form_fields
on the same page.
CoffeeScript samples:
# Listen on an element
initializeSortable -> ($el)
$el.sortable(...)
$el.on 'fields_added.nested_form_fields', (event, param) ->
console.log event.target # The added field
console.log $(this) # $el
# Listen on document
$(document).on "fields_added.nested_form_fields", (event, param) ->
switch param.object_class
when "video"
console.log "Video object added"
else
console.log "INFO: Fields were successfully added, callback not handled."
You can pass any additional data to the event's callback. This may be useful if you trigger them programmatically. Example:
# Trigger button click programmatically and pass an object `{hello: 'world'}`
$('.add_nested_fields_link').trigger('click', [{hello: 'world'}])
# Listen for the event
$(document).on "fields_added.nested_form_fields", (event, param) ->
console.log param.additional_data #=> {hello: 'world'}
Sometimes your code needs to know what index it has when it is instantiated onto the page. HTML data elements may need to point to other form elements for instance. This is needed for integration with rails3-jquery-autocomplete.
To enable string substitution with the current index use the magic string __nested_field_for_replace_with_index__
.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
https://github.com/ncri/nested_form_fields/graphs/contributors