Skip to content

Aethelflaed/iord

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

IORD

IORD is a runtime scaffolding system based on an easy way to represent data.

Description

IORD stands for Information Oriented Representation of Data.

It can be used to easily create customizable CRUD based controllers and scaffold views automatically. IORD also handles strong parameters verification based on the given data.

Installation

Add iord to your Gemfile:

gem 'iord'

And run bundle install within your app's directory.

Getting Started

Quick method

The easiest way to use IORD is to define a route with the iord/generic controller:

# config/routes.rb
resources :products, controller: 'iord/generic'

This will automatically handle the CRUD methods and display the data from the Product.

The attributes displayed will be the model's attributes except deleted_at on all views and _id, created_at, updated_at on index, new and edit.

You can still customize the views by creating the corresponding file in app/views/products/.

Namespaced resources

For namespaced resources, use the following syntax:

namespace :admin, module: nil do
  resource :products, controller: 'iord/generic'
end
namespace :admin do
  # normal admin scoped routes, which controllers will be in module Admin
end

The model used in this case is still ::Product.

Customizable method

You can also create your own route pointing to your controller, for example:

# config/routes.rb
resources :products

# app/controllers/products_controller.rb
require 'iord/controller'

class ProductsController < ApplicationController
  include Iord::Controller
end

You can then override the actions, change the displayed attributes, ...

Views will be loaded from the corresponding views directory and default to IORD views.

Namespaced routes

For namespaced routes, you don't have to specify module: nil as for the quick method, and the model used will still be ::Product.

Generators

IORD ships with generators to automatically create controllers:

rails generate iord:controller product

Creates a controller including Iord::Controller with default attribute methods.

rails generate iord:scaffold customer firstname lastname

Scaffolds the model and the controller, which will have specialized attribute methods based on the specified attributes.

Documentation

This documentation provides customization information which are mainly available if you use your own controller.

Attributes

IORD defines a lot of helper methods to retrieve the attributes to display:

show_attrs      # used for `show` action
                # defaults to resource_class.attribute_names.map{|i| i.to_sym} - %i(deleted_at)
index_attrs     # used for `index` action
                # defaults to `attrs`
new_attrs       # used for `new` and `create` action
                # defaults to `form_attrs`
edit_attrs      # used for `edit` and `update` action
                # defaults to `form_attrs`
form_attrs      # defaults to `attrs`
attrs           # defaults to `show_attrs` - %i(_id created_at updated_at)

IORD's attributes are used to generate the views and the parameters requirements / permissions.

The default and basic attributes methods return and array of symbols directly matching the model's attributes.

For more complex cases, there are two kinds of data expected:

  • display-oriented attributes for show_attrs and index_attrs.
  • form-oriented attributes for new_attrs and edit_attrs.

Both complex cases attributes are fully recursive, meaning you can have nested objects.

Display-oriented attributes

Display-oriented attributes are either symbols or hashes.

Symbols are directly sent to the resource and the corresponding value is used. The name displayed for the attribute will be a humanized version of itself.

Hashes permit more complex structures based on the presence of a specific key. The value used depends on the first keys encountered given this order:

  • :array will display an array of attributes, typically an has_many relation.

    It will list each element inside an ul and display them as if they had the :object key with the attributes in the :attr field.

    The name of the attribute will be a humanized version of the value of :array

  • :object expects the hash to also have the :attrs key mapped to an array of display-oriented attributes.

    It will use the same logic as the action but will display the values of the object it gets by calling the value of :object on the resource.

    The name of the attribute will be a humanized version of the value of :object

  • :value is a fully customizable attribute which value will be used as the name of the attribute.

    The value of the attribute is computed using the :format mapped value which should be a Proc.

    Depending on the current resource to respond to the :value mapped value, the proc will either receive the corresponding value or the resource and the :value mapped value.

  • :image will display the image at the url returned by the resource when calling :image mapped value.

  • :link will display a link to the url returned by the resource when calling :link mapeed value.

  • In any other case, it calls itself recursively by replacing the current resource by the value returned by the resource when calling the method named after the first key, and the attributes by the value of the first key.

    The name of the attribute will be a humanized version of the first key.

    In other words, in the products controller, the following code displays the value category.to_s labelled Category:

    {category: :to_s}

    Having {category: :to_s} will return the value of @resource.category.to_s.
    Another example would be {category: {description: :to_html}} which will call @resource.category.description.to_html

Form-oriented attributes

Form-oriented attributes are either symbols, arrays or hashes.

Symbols are displayed using f.text_field for the input, and f.label for the label.

Arrays are displayed using f.public_send *attr for the input, and f.label attr[1] for the label.

Example:

def form_attrs
  [
    :name,
    [:select, :category_id, Category.all.collect{|c| [c.name, c.id]}]
  ]
end

This will display a form with a text field labelled Name and a select labelled Category.

Hashes permit more complex structures based on the presence of a specific key. The label will have either the value of the :attr key humanized, or the value of the :label key, if present. Lastly, if the array has the :hidden key, then no label is displayed.

The value used depends on the first keys encountered given this order:

  • :fields will trigger a nested form (using the NestedForm gem), for the object referenced by the attribute mapped by :attr.

    The :fields is mapped to an array of form-oriented attributes.

    It will display either one or many objects depending on the kind of relation. When displaying many objects, it will also add the Add a ... and Remove this ... links.

    When displaying many objects, you can add the key :not_new_record to prevent it from being displayed on new objects (usefull for id for example).

  • :field, which type is check:

    • when Array, uses f.public_send *attr[:field]`.

      This is quite similar to directly giving an Array, but allows to change the label.

    • when Hash, calls the controller method in field attr[:field][:helper][0] The :helper sub-key should be an array.

      The method should accept at least 2 arguments:

      • the form object (from form_for or fields_for)
      • the current attr Hash
      • any other parameters provided (attr[:field][:helper][1..-1])

Accessing the instances

IORD uses @resource to store a model instance and @collection to store the collection.

The @resource is initialized only in resource-based actions and not in collection-based actions such as index.

You can add a resource-based action using the following class methods:

# app/controllers/products_controller.rb
require 'iord/controller'

class ProductsController < ApplicationController
  include Iord::Controller

  resource_actions :inc_qty
  # or
  resource_actions :inc_qty, :dec_qty
  # or
  resource_actions [:inc_qty, :dec_qty]

  # to replace any existing actions:
  resource_actions! :show, :destroy
end

URL helpers

IORD defines several URL helpers:

collection_url
new_resource_url
resource_url(resource = nil)
edit_resource_url(resource = nil)

Model's namespace

You can set the model's namespace using the following class methods:

# app/controllers/products_controller.rb
require 'iord/controller'

class ProductsController < ApplicationController
  include Iord::Controller

  set_resource_namespace Subsidiary
  # or the other syntax this one is aliased to:
  self.resource_namespace = Subsidiary
end

The model loaded will now be Subsidiary::Product.

Resource information

You can query information on the resource using the following controller helper methods:

  • resource_class, complete model class constant
  • resource_name, humanized version of the model class name
  • resource_name_u, underscore version of the model class name
  • collection_name, humanized version of the collection name (plural of resource_name)
  • resource_path, array of the modules as Symbol in which the model is nested
  • action_path, path used to access the controller, used by url helpers.

Add a response format

You can add a response format with the following class method:

# app/controllers/products_controller.rb
require 'iord/controller'

class ProductsController < ApplicationController
  include Iord::Controller

  crud_response_format do |instance, format, action|
    case action
	when :index
	  format.json { instance.render json: @resource_class.all }
    end
  end
end

License

This project rocks and uses MIT-LICENSE.

Copyright 2014 Geoffroy Planquart

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages