Jelly is an unobtrusive Javascript framework for jQuery and Rails. It provides a set of conventions and tools that help you organize your AJAX and client-side code, while keeping Javascript out of your views and markup. Jelly is the glue between your Rails controllers and jQuery events.
Jelly encourages and enables unit testing your Javascript code. Using a Javascript testing framework such as Jasmine or Screw Unit, Jelly allows you to test AJAX and client-side events independently from your Rails app.
- Unobtrusive Javascript. Your Javascript code remains completely separate from your markup.
- Test Driven Development. Jelly blends well with the Javascript testing framework Jasmine and allows you to test-drive your ajaxy and client-side code.
- Familiar conventions. Jelly follows the conventions of Ruby on Rails, making it simple for developers to organize and keep track of their Javascript code.
Jelly is NOT a Javascript generator. With Jelly, you're writing pure Javascript to define your AJAX browser events. Jelly simply provides a set of Javascript functions to make interacting with Rails easier. It's nothing like RJS.
Jelly is NOT a Javascript framework. Jelly is designed to be used with jQuery and jQuery's event-based AJAX framework. Jelly also supports the popular jQuery ajaxForm plugin.
- Rails 2.3.x
- jQuery 1.3.x
Jelly is now available as a gem on on RubyForge:
sudo gem install jelly
Then, install the required Javascript files to your public/javascripts
directory by running the Jelly generator:
script/generate jelly
Be sure to require jelly
when your application loads. This can be done in your environment.rb
in the Rails::Initializer.run
block:
config.gem 'jelly'
Then, in your layouts, add the following to the <head>
section:
<%= javascript_include_tag :jelly, *application_jelly_files %>
<%= spread_jelly %>
The javascript_include_tag
line will include the required Javascript libraries for jelly. The :jelly
javascript
expansion includes the latest version of jQuery. If you already have jQuery included in the page, use the :only_jelly
expansion instead
The spread_jelly
line activates the events that you have defined on the current page.
Jelly maps page-specific Javascript functions to Rails Actions and Controllers. For example: StoriesController#index will
activate the index
function in the Fun
Jelly object. Jelly uses jQuery's $(document).ready()
to execute the
page-specifc function when the page has loaded. Let's look at some code:
In public/javascripts/pages/stories.js, we create a simple Jelly file:
Jelly.Pages.add("Stories", {
index: function() {
$('a.clickme').click(function() {
alert('Hello world!');
});
}
});
Jelly will automatically execute the index
function when the Rails app runs the StoriesController#index
action. Lets
continue the example by adding more Javascript functions that map to the new
and show
Rails actions. We can also
specify an all
function, which will be executed on all actions in the StoriesController
.
Jelly.Pages.add("Stories", {
index: function() {
$('a.clickme').click(function() {
alert('Hello world!');
});
},
'new': function() {
$('#mydiv').html('<span>Hello World</span>');
},
show : function() {},
all: function() {
$('#hidden_stuff').show();
}
});
Notice the slightly different syntax for new
. This is because new
is a reserved word in Javascript.
Create a separate file in public/javascripts/pages
for each of your controllers as you use Jelly throughout your application.
Jelly can also create Pages and Components without using Jelly.Pages.add
. All you need to do is make sure Jelly can
find a Javascript object by the given name; Jelly will use that object as the 'page' object and call the action
methods on it. The Javascript for above example can therefore be re-written like this:
var Stories = {};
Stories.index = function() {
$('a.clickme').click(function() {
alert('Hello world!');
});
};
Often you will want to mix common Javascript components on many pages throughout your application, not just in the namespace of a single Controller. Jelly Components allow you to organize common Javascript code, and invoke it on arbitrary pages within your application.
Jelly Components are simply Javascript classes with (at least) an init
function. Here's an example of a SearchBox
component that
activates an autocompleter on a search box on every page.
in public/javascripts/components/search_box.js:
SearchBox = {
init: function(){
$("#search_box").autocompleter({
url : '/search'
});
}
};
To attach the SearchBox component to the page and automatically call the init
function when the page is ready, we use the attach_javascript_component
method in our view. This can be done either in your layout (for components to attach to all pages), or in your view using
content_for
.
in the <head>
tag of the layout:
<% attach_javascript_component('SearchBox') %>
or in a view:
<% content_for :javascript do -%>
<% attach_javascript_component('SearchBox') %>
<% end -%>
Components are initialized before the page-specific Javascript functions by default.
Jelly adds an $.ajaxWithJelly()
function to the jQuery namespace which is a simple wrapper for jQuery's $.ajax()
.
When you use $.ajaxWithJelly()
to create an ajax event, Jelly automatically adds an onSuccess handler to your ajax
call that invokes the Jelly framework after receiving the ajax response.
Jelly's convention relies on the Controller to specify the javascript callback after an ajax request. We can invoke Jelly
in response to a javascript request with the jelly_callback
method.
This example assumes that you have working knowledge of jQuery's $.ajax()
function. If not, read up on it here.
The view, new.html.erb:
<a href="#" id="create_story_link">create story</a>
The controller, stories_controller.rb
class StoriesController < ApplicationController
def new
end
def create
Story.create!(params[:story])
respond_to do |format|
format.html
format.js { jelly_callback }
end
end
end
The javascript, pages/stories.js:
Jelly.Pages.add("Stories", {
new: function() {
$("#create_story_link").click(function() {
$.ajaxWithJelly({
url: "/stories",
data: {
name : 'Untitled Story',
}
});
});
},
on_create: function() {
alert('Your story has been created!');
}
});
The example above attaches an ajax event to the "create story" link, and when clicked, jQuery will fire a ajax POST request to
the create action of our controller. The controller then responds with jelly_callback
, and by default invokes the
javascript function named on_create
in the Stories javascript file.
If we wanted to make the creation of the story a bit more interesting, we can send back a html fragment of the
new story that has been created, and pass it as a parameter to on_create
so it can be added to the page. Let's see how that might look:
The view, new.html.erb:
<a href="#" id="create_story_link">create story</a>
<ul id="stories">
<li>First Story</li>
</ul>
The controller, stories_controller.rb
class StoriesController < ApplicationController
def new
end
def create
Story.create!(params[:story])
respond_to do |format|
format.html
format.js do
jelly_callback do
render :partial => 'story_list_item'
end
end
end
end
end
The javascript, pages/stories.js:
Jelly.Pages.add("Stories", {
new: function() {
$("#create_story_link").click(function() {
$.ajaxWithJelly({
url: "/stories",
data: {
name : 'Untitled Story',
}
});
});
},
on_create: function(storyListItemHtml) {
$("#stories").append(storyListItemHtml);
}
});
The jelly_callback
function accepts a block which is evaluated in the context of the view layer, which allows you to
render partials and use Rails Helpers as you normally would. You can pass as many parameters as you want to the javascript
callback by passing an array to the jelly_callback
block:
in the controller, stories_controller.rb:
def create
@story = Story.create!(params[:story])
respond_to do |format|
format.html
format.js do
jelly_callback do
[ render(:partial => 'story_list_item'), @story.id, "Nice looking story, smart guy" ]
end
end
end
end
in the javascript, pages/stories.js:
on_create: function(storyListItemHtml, storyId, message) {
$(storyListItemHtml).attr('id', storyId).appendTo($("#stories"));
alert(message);
},
As we have seen above, by default, jelly_callback
invokes the javascript function by prepending on_
to the Rails
action name. The jelly_callback
method can take an optional parameter for the name of the callback to allow more fine-grained
client-side behaviors depending on the server-side response.
in the controller, stories_controller.rb
def create
begin
Story.create!(params[:story])
respond_to do |format|
format.html
format.js do
jelly_callback('successful_create') do
render :partial => 'story_list_item'
end
end
end
rescue
respond_to do |format|
format.html
format.js do
jelly_callback('failed_create')
end
end
end
end
in the javascript, pages/stories.js:
on_successful_create: function(storyListItemHtml) {
$("#stories").append(storyListItemHtml);
},
on_failed_create: function() {
alert('Oops, there was a problem creating your story!);
}
By default, ajax callbacks functions are scoped to the current Jelly page. But if you want, you can also direct ajax
callbacks to functions on Jelly components or other Javascript objects in your application. To
do this, send an :on
paremeter to jelly_callback
, for example.
in the controller:
respond_to do |format|
format.js do
jelly_callback('successful_create', :on => 'CommonHandler') do
render :partial => 'story_list_item'
end
end
end
This will call CommonHandler.on_successful_create()
with the response.
Track Jelly's development roadmap on Jelly's Pivotal Tracker project
To run ruby tests, run rake spec
.
To run Javascript tests, open jelly/spec/jasmine_runner.html
in Firefox or Safari.