I have a variable 'messages' of type array and whenever I put it into the terminal it has tabs and new lines but whenever I save messages to a variable and display it on my rails application, it no longer has these. How do I fix this so it shows the new lines and tabs on the rails app.
Code for outputting to the terminal in model (User):
def runMessages
messages << stdout.read
messages << stderr.read
puts "OUTPUT IS:" + messages[0]
messages
end
Code in controller for saving to variable:
messages = #user.runMessages
#user.output = messages[0]
Code in views:
<p> <%= #user.output %> </p>
In the terminal it looks something like this:
Beginning run ...
Done.
While on the application it looks like this:
Beginning run...Done.
Use the HTML <pre> tag.
<pre> <%= #user.output %> </pre>
You could also use it in combination with the <code> tag, see this question for the difference.
My goal is to retrieve the a mailer's body from db.
I created a model that store the body in db, with simple text, html tag and variable (as in the original static mailer's body) and changed the piece of body in mailer's view.
I tried with <%= raw #body_db.html.html_safe %> , the text is correctly imported from db, but when i receive the mail there isn't variables's substitution.
Example:
if in DB template i have
Cliente: <%= #nome_cliente %>, in my mail i receive Cliente: <%= #nome_cliente %> but i want Cliente: Jon Doe
P.S. :
All variables are ok using 'static' text
Can someone help me?
Thanks
Great !!!
I found solution!
Without using partial, I used this in my view, so i can include ERB in DB !!
<%= render :inline => #body_db.html.html_safe, :layout => false %>
Thanks to all !
I'm trying to create a situation where one user makes message templates and another one can plug in values. I'm using the best_in_place gem, which will allow a user to edit the message on the show page.
The problem is this. When I call the message, with the required erb to make the gem work, it treats all of this as a regular string, not as ruby.
This is unclear, I'm sorry.
Here's the code.
#announcement.content = "The <%= best_in_place #announcement, :train %> is arriving in five minutes."
/show.html.erb
<%= #announcement.content %>
I want it to put "The click to set train is arriving in five minutes." and if the user clicks where it says "click to set train," a text field will open for them to edit (this is something the best-in-place gem does).
Instead, it puts "The <%= best_in_place #announcement, :train %> is arriving in five minutes."
I understand why it is doing this, but I don't know how to make it instead interpret the ruby I'm trying to pass in.
Ideas?
Use regular old string interpolation:
#announcement.content = "The #{best_in_place #announcement, :train} is arriving in five minutes."
You can use ERB to render any ERB template string. In this case something like:
<%= ERB.new(#announcement.content).result %>
Although you likely won't have access to all your Rails helpers, etc.
The Rails way to do this:
#announcement.content_type = :arriving
Later:
<%= render(partial: #announcement.content_type)
In _arriving.erb:
The <%= best_in_place #announcement, :train %> is arriving in five minutes.
TL;DR: ERB is not Ruby, and Rails uses both at different times.
You want simple Ruby string interpolation here:
#announcement.content = "The #{best_in_place #announcement, :train} is arriving in five minutes."
This is unclear, I'm sorry.
Not to worry, the Rails framework throws so many different new concepts at you it can be frustrating for newcomers.
Start from this: the Ruby framework builds the answer to the user's browser from a collection of resources Each file is evaluated by an interpreter for its own language. The trick is: look at the extension.
Files ending in .coffee will be compiled into javascript, files ending in .scss will become CSS, and in the same way files ending in .erb will yield HTML.
ERB is a language composed of mostly HTML already, plus a tag that allows you to interpolate Ruby. ERB stands for Embedded Ruby.
What about files ending in .rb, like the file in which you (surely) are evaluating #announcement.content = "The <%= best_in_place[...]" (a controller, I guess)?
Well, that's just pure Ruby :) that's why the ERB interpolation syntax <%= ... > is not recognized.
What you want to do in the controller, is (as you're trying to do) preparing the data for the view. The ruby in the <%= ... > tag in ERB will have access to the controller's instance variables, i.e. the variables with an # in front defined in the controller. But to define those, inside the controller, you should rely on Ruby alone.
Take-home message:
Be aware of which language you are writing in at each moment. For example:
# show.html.erb
<p>Here is ERB, which will be interpreted straight into HTML</p>
<% "Inside the '<% ...' tag is Ruby, but results won't show up in the HTML because there's no '<%='."%>
<% which_language = "Ruby" # Even variable assignments, and comments, do work %>
<%= "Inside the '<%=' tag, you're writing and interpolating #{which_language} :)" %>
I think the fact that I wasn't clear made it hard to answer this question.
What I'm doing is transforming user-inputted text (using a method in the model, called by the controller) to replace certain keywords with erb tags that call the best_in_place plugin. In my view, when presenting this content to another user, I wanted to call this content, which is saved as an attribute in the database, in such a way that it would render correctly for the other user to have the best_in_place functionality active.
Here's what I ended up doing. It is working, but if you have better ideas, please let me know.
In the announcements#create view, the user creates an announcement with certain pre-defined blocks of bracketed text as well as free-input text. For example, they might write "[train] is leaving from [platform] in [time] minutes."
When they hit save, the controller's create action calls the construct_message method from the model. It looks like this:
def construct_message(msg)
msg.gsub! '[train]', '<%= best_in_place #announcement, :train_id, :as => :select, collection: Train::list_trains, place_holder: "Click here to set train." %>' #note: list_trains and list_platforms are methods on the model, not really important...
msg.gsub! '[platform]', '<%= best_in_place #announcement, :platform_id, :as => select, collection: Platform::list_platforms, placeholder: "Click here to set platform." %>'
msg.gsub! '[time]', '<%= best_in_place #announcement, :number_of_minutes, placeholder: "Click here to set." %>'
end
Then, when I want to show that attribute in my view, I'm using render :inline, like this.
on announcements/:id
<p id="notice"><%= notice %></p>
<p>
<strong>Content:</strong>
<% announcement = #announcement %>
<%= render :inline => announcement.content, locals: { :announcement => announcement } %>
</p>
This allows the erb call that I wrote into the attribute to be functional.
Also note that I'm choosing to use a local rather than instance variable here; this is because in announcements#index, I also render this text and the table there uses local variables.
I'm working on a web application that has a view where data is fetched and parsed from a text file (the textfile is only available at the backend, not to the user). I've written a function that takes in the text file and converts it to an array of strings, it's called txt_to_arr. Then I have another function line_fetcher which just calls txt_to_arr and outputs a random string from the array.
In my view, I call the controller's function as so: <% line_fetcher %>.
I've put both txt_to_arr and line_fetcher into the view controller's helper rb file, and when I run rails s, the random string is not rendered at all. I've also tried <% puts line_fetcher %>
I've checked in Bash that the function does output random strings from the text file, so the function does work correctly. Also, the text file being parsed is in the public folder. Does anyone have an idea why this might be?
Thanks a lot!
Try placing the code in the controller and assigning the output to a variable using
a=`line_fetcher` (note the backtics) as detailed at
http://rubyquicktips.com/post/5862861056/execute-shell-commands
and then <%= a %> in your view.
and place the file in the root of your rails app
Simple erb like <%= line_fetcher %> would work good for simple variables.
But if you want output of any model/database instance then do:
<%= ModelName.first.inspect %>
Note the inspect word.
And in case of using HAML do:
=ModelName.first.inspect
In ERB: The <% %> signify that there is Ruby code here to be interpreted. The <%= %> says interpreted and output the ruby code, ie display/print the result.
So it seems you need to use the extra = sign if you want to output in a standard ERB file.
<%= line_fetcher %>
Use <%= %> to output something in your view, so:
<%= line_fetcher %>
I have a question in using luquid. My question is like this,
I have a model called 'Page' (with is an ActiveRecord::Base
inherited) , and it has a column called 'content' which will store
the html page content.
I have a code to display it as follows
<%#template = Liquid::Template.parse(page_content) %>
<%= #template.render('page_content' => yield) %>
where 'page_content' has implemented in application helper as follows
def current_site_layout
Page.find(1). content
end
but my problem is if I have content as follows
<h1>This is a test</h1>
It will display in the page as
<h1>This is a test</h1> (with <h1></ h1> tags)
where as I want it to print like This is a test (formatting
applied as h1)
what am I missing here , and I think I will have to use liquid_methods
or something like that. But since I'm new to liquid I'm not sure which
method to use.. can someone help me
I'm on rails3 and using gem 'liquid 2.2.2', from 'github.com/GnomesLab/
liquid.git'
thanks in advance
cheers
sameera
In rails 3, strings are escaped by default. To display unescaped strings, you need to call raw method explicitly.
<%#template = Liquid::Template.parse(page_content) %>
<%= raw #template.render('page_content' => yield) %>