Set of helpers: link_to_new, link_to_index, link_to_show, link_to_edit, link_to_destroy
Bonus helper: link_to_back
Demo application sources with Twitter Bootstrap enabled: link_to_action_demo
Want to use this gem with Zurb Foundation? Make a feature request.
Rails scaffold-generated links are not DRY, and it becomes even worse, when someone tries to make them I18n-friendly (they are not by default).
If you have twitter-bootstrap installed, and want to make your links look like a buttons, there will be another addition, 'class' option. To make these buttons really pretty, you will also need icons.
So how I18n-friendly button-style link with icon looks like in a view code? Well, it can look like this:
<%= link_to raw("<i class=\"icon-edit\"></i> #{t(:edit)}"), edit_comment_path(@comment), class: 'btn' %>
And scaffolded code was:
<%= link_to 'Edit', edit_comment_path(@comment) %>
Even in simple scaffolded link words 'edit' and 'comment' was repeated twice. In the more complex example word 'edit' was written three times.
Using link_to_action
gem, you can avoid those duplications completely:
<%= link_to_edit @comment %>
That's all for this link, but not all for this gem. It is configurable, it can be tuned up to suit other than twitter-bootstrap CSS frameworks (which is off by default anyway), and it even can take advantage of cancan's abilities.
This gem is especially useful when an application contains many similar-looking
links. Many global and link-specific options are exists, so this gem is flexible.
And you still have link_to
if you want some link to look really simple!
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'link_to_action'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Add initializer, locale file and templates. Note that CSS classes, icons and cancan are disabled by default. To leave it as it is, just run:
$ rails generate link_to_action:install
Edit config/initializers/link_to_action.rb
to change some options. The list of
options with defaults provided below.
To install link_to_action
with Twitter Bootstrap and icons enabled, run:
$ rails generate link_to_action:install --bootstrap
In general:
link_to_{action} object, options
Per action, with commented-out link_to equivalents (no CSS or icons, just to keep it simple):
link_to_new MyModel # link_to 'New MyModel', new_my_model_path
link_to_index MyModel # link_to 'My Models', my_models_path
link_to_show @my_model # link_to @my_model.name, my_model_path(@my_model)
link_to_edit @my_model # link_to 'Edit MyModel', edit_my_model_path(@my_model)
link_to_destroy @my_model # link_to 'Delete MyModel', my_model_path(@my_model),
# method: :delete, data: { confirm: 'Are you sure?' }
link_to_back # link_to :back
link_to_show
tries some methods (by default :name and :to_s) to get
name for the link. This can be changed by specifying i18n
option. Other
helpers use I18n to get link names unless name
option specified.
link_to_action
comes with I18n preconfigured, nested in helpers.link_to
section. Custom (or localized) model names can be added to activerecord.models
section.
en:
activerecord:
models:
my_model: 'My Awesome Model'
helpers:
link_to:
new: 'New %{model}'
show: 'Show %{model}'
index: 'All %{model}'
edit: 'Edit %{model}'
destroy: 'Delete %{model}'
destroy_confirm: 'Are you sure?'
back: 'Back'
%{model}
variables are not used by default for show
, edit
, and destroy
.
Default options are:
use_cancan = false # overwrite this to use cancan
use_icons = false # overwrite this to use FontAwesome icons
icons_place_left = true
icons_size = 'large'
icon_new = 'plus'
icon_index = ''
icon_edit = 'edit'
icon_destroy = 'trash'
icon_back = 'undo'
use_classes = false # overwrite this to use Twitter Bootstrap classes
classes_append = false
class_default = 'btn'
class_new = 'btn-primary'
class_index = ''
class_edit = nil
class_destroy = 'btn-danger'
class_back = nil
size_class_default = nil
size_class_large = 'btn-large'
size_class_small = 'btn-small'
size_class_mini = 'btn-mini'
show_methods = [ :name, :to_s ]
destroy_confirm = true
destroy_skip_pjax = false # overwrite this if pjax is used
Look to config/initializers/link_to_action.rb
for detailed descriptions.
:name # overwrites default name of the link
:class # overwrites or appends class list
:size # size of the button-like link
:params # hash for to polymorphic_path, see examples
:icon # Font-Awesome icon
:icon_size # Size of icon
:icon_swap # Swap default position of icon left-right
link_to_destroy
options:
:confirm # true/false or some text per-link basis
link_to_show
options:
:name # overwrites default name of the link
:send # method to send to object to get name
:raw # method to send to object to get name, output raw
:i18n # if `i18n: true` is set, I18n name is displayed
# Link with parameters
link_to_new Comment, params: {user_id: 1} # /comments/new?user_id=1
# Nested link
link_to_new [ @user, Comment ] # /users/1/comments/new
- Better testing.
- Improve README, add more examples.
- Add templates for Zurb Foundation.
- Whitespace fix in templates.
This gem was heavily inspired by Platformatec's show_for and simple_form gems. Some code samples were taken from these gems.
This gem was announced in Ruby5 podcast and A Fresh Cup weblog.
- 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