public
Description: Paperclip File Management Plugin
Homepage: http://www.thoughtbot.com/projects/paperclip
Clone URL: git://github.com/thoughtbot/paperclip.git
jyurek (author)
Mon Jun 09 11:21:01 -0700 2008
commit  311732b3b4f8ab4985506e7e2c03af7d57893ff2
tree    17522c29273e6005e91ddeba811f3841937dd7fe
parent  e0c9d64f431c147b87b4762e2bce4019692ce7ea
name age message
file .gitignore Fri May 02 13:34:39 -0700 2008 Added a validation to validate against the cont... [austin.bain]
file LICENSE Fri Apr 18 09:08:33 -0700 2008 Moved the License into its own file [jyurek]
file README Wed Jun 04 12:06:13 -0700 2008 Corrected classname in README files [jpinnix]
file README.rdoc Fri Sep 12 11:27:52 -0700 2008 Added a Contributing section to the README [jyurek]
file Rakefile Tue Jul 08 14:37:48 -0700 2008 Changed tests from test_*.rb to *_test.rb [jyurek]
directory generators/ Thu Aug 21 08:02:32 -0700 2008 Fixed missing .erb in generator [jyurek]
file init.rb Fri Apr 18 09:08:54 -0700 2008 Rearranged stuff and added a gem build/deploy p... [jyurek]
directory lib/ Thu Nov 13 08:38:44 -0800 2008 Changed Geometry#to_s to include the modifier s... [Steve]
directory tasks/ Wed Nov 05 13:32:14 -0800 2008 Added patch from Tekin Suleyman regarding prima... [jyurek]
directory test/ Fri Nov 14 14:45:31 -0800 2008 Tweaks to geometry changes. [jyurek]
README.rdoc

Paperclip

Paperclip is intended as an easy file attachment library for ActiveRecord. The intent behind it was to keep setup as easy as possible and to treat files as much like other attributes as possible. This means they aren’t saved to their final locations on disk, nor are they deleted if set to nil, until ActiveRecord::Base#save is called. It manages validations based on size and presence, if required. It can transform its assigned image into thumbnails if needed, and the prerequisites are as simple as installing ImageMagick (which, for most modern Unix-based systems, is as easy as installing the right packages). Attached files are saved to the filesystem and referenced in the browser by an easily understandable specification, which has sensible and useful defaults.

See the documentation for the has_attached_file method for options.

Usage

In your model:

  class User < ActiveRecord::Base
    has_attached_file :avatar, :styles => { :medium => "300x300>", :thumb => "100x100>" }
  end

In your migrations:

  class AddAvatarColumnsToUser < ActiveRecord::Migration
    def self.up
      add_column :users, :avatar_file_name, :string
      add_column :users, :avatar_content_type, :string
      add_column :users, :avatar_file_size, :integer
    end

    def self.down
      remove_column :users, :avatar_file_name
      remove_column :users, :avatar_content_type
      remove_column :users, :avatar_file_size
    end
  end

In your edit and new views:

  <% form_for :user, @user, :url => user_path, :html => { :multipart => true } do |form| %>
    <%= form.file_field :avatar %>
  <% end %>

In your controller:

  def create
    @user = User.create( params[:user] )
  end

In your show view:

  <%= image_tag @user.avatar.url %>
  <%= image_tag @user.avatar.url(:medium) %>
  <%= image_tag @user.avatar.url(:thumb) %>