I want to let users select between two radio buttons, and then transfer that data to a controller where it will be used as a filter on a database. The filtered data from the database should then be displayed back on the page.
My form
<%= form_tag do %>
<%= radio_button_tag(:sex, "male") %>
<%= label_tag(:male, "I am male") %>
<%= radio_button_tag(:sex, "female") %>
<%= label_tag(:female, "I am female") %>
<%= submit_tag("Submit") %>
<% end %>
But I am unsure on how I can achieve this. I have created a model "Countries" that refers to a database that have a list of countries and some statistics related to gender within that country. Any suggestions?
I would suggest that you implement search functionality on the model "Countries".Railscast has a few casts on the subject.
Related
How would I go about creating a form that takes what user input as a value and just passes it to the controller without being connected to any model?
Something simple like i.e. calculating tax based on input salary, or other calculation like that, when I show the user a form, let them fill it, and when submitting it would go to the results
<%= form_with url: 'calculator#result' do |form| %>
<%= form.number_field :value, in: 1000.0..20000.0, step: 0.5 %>
<%= form.submit %>
<% end %>
i expected something like this to pass 'value' and redirect to calculator#result when submitting, but the button doesn't really do anything. whereas a form connected to a model seems pretty smart and does it
The form_tag Helper method is usually used for forms that are not linked to a model.
I think this should work:
<%= form_tag("/calculator/result", :method => "get") do %>
<%= label_tag(:value, "Value:") %>
<%= text_field_tag(:value) %>
<%= submit_tag("Submit") %>
<% end %>
I'm new to Ruby on Rails. There are two models in my project: room and guest. The association is "room has_many guests" and "guest belongs to room".
I have separated views for manage rooms and guests. Rooms don't require "guests" value on creation. However, I want to create new guests and assign it to certain room at the same time. What will be the proper way to do it? How do I transfer the input from web and match the entities in database.
The code is pretty much the same as "Getting Started with Rails". In the tutorial, they add "comments" in the "article" view and use "comment" as a sub-resource of "article". In my case, I treat the two models equally and want to manage them in separated views.
Update:
I used the collection_select and try to work with my guest_controller.
<%= form_for :guest, url: guests_path do |f| %>
<% if #guest.errors.any? %>
<div id="error_explanation">
<h2>
<%= pluralize(#guest.errors.count, "error") %> prohibited this guest from being added:
</h2>
<ul>
<% #guest.errors.full_messages.each do |msg| %>
<li><%= msg %></li>
<% end %>
</ul>
</div>
<% end %>
<p>
<%= f.label :name %><br>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
</p>
<p>
<%= f.label :phone %><br>
<%= f.text_field :phone %>
</p>
<p>
<%= f.label :room%><br>
<%= f.text_field :room %>
</p>
<p>
<%= f.label :room %><br>
<%= f.collection_select(:room_id, Room.all, :id, :title) %>
</p>
<p>
<%= f.submit %>
</p>
<% end %>
<%= link_to 'Back', guests_path %>
In my guest_controller, the create method called by the form above is :
def create
#guest = Guest.new(guest_params)
#guest.room = Room.find(params[:room_id])
if #guest.save
redirect_to #guest
else
render 'new'
end
end
However, when I create a new guest, it shows that:
ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound in GuestsController#create
Couldn't find Room with 'id'=
I checked that room_id=4 and Room.find(4) return the proper room.
What's wrong?
If you want to select one room from those that exist, use collection_select form helper, here is a relevant snippet from the docs:
f.collection_select(:city_id, City.all, :id, :name)
This outputs a dropdown list that:
fills in city_id parameter in this context
uses City.all for filling in the options in the list (I will be referring to "each" city as city)
uses city.id as data (that gets sent in the form)
shows city.name for each city in the dropdown list (hopefully, human-readable)
Bear in mind though, that in terms of security it's like "look, you can select this, and this and this!", that does not prevent users from selecting an unlisted option: either by modifying form markup by hand or sending handcrafted queries.
So should you ever be limiting access to specific rooms, and list only Room.unlocked (unlocked assumed a scope), make sure the received room_id refers to a room from that scope as well. Most of these problems are dealt with using either validations or careful association management (Room.unlocked.find_by_id(:room_id) that outputs nil if the room is not in that scope).
UPD: as for the latest problem you're having -- your understanding on how the form contents look in params seems to be wrong. It's quite a common misconception actually.
form_for :guest will construct a separate object/hash in params[:guest], with all the form's fields inside it. So it actually is inside params[:guest][:room_id], but no, don't rush with adding the missing part.
You've already built a #guest object from entire params[:guest], so if the room actually exists, it's inside #guest.room already and can be validated inside the model during save. Have a look at Rails validators.
Take a look at the fields_for tag:
http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Helpers/FormHelper.html#method-i-fields_for
It allows just that, to create a guest while creating a room and associating each other.
In my rails app, if a user mentions another username in a comment by using the # character, such as #max i'm trying to add autocomplete to suggest a list of users and then automatically create a link_to (username, user_path(user)
This is what I have in my comment partial:
<%= form_for [commentable, Comment.new] do |f| %>
<%= hidden_field_tag :commentable_type, commentable.class.to_s %>
<%= hidden_field_tag :commentable_id, commentable.id %>
<p>
<%= f.text_area :body %>
</p>
<p><%= f.submit "Submit" %></p>
<% end %>
I'm trying to use this gem: https://github.com/ichord/jquery-atwho-rails
It says to bind the text area with
data = ['tom','john'];
$('textarea').atwho({at:"#", 'data':data});
Where do I actually put this? Can I do something like data = User.all? Should I just be using a regular expression to do this?
I think the reason that data = User.all isn't working is because User.all will return an array of User objects. What you want to do is retrieve those User object usernames (or whatever you want the autocomplete to use, and store that in data instead.
You might try something like
#usernames = User.pluck(:username)
to get all the usernames. Then, in your partial:
data = <% #usernames &>
$('textarea').atwho({at:"#", 'data':data});
This is assuming of course that your partial is an .erb file where you can embed ruby code.
You can do something like this:
<script>
data = <%= raw User.pluck(:username).compact.to_json %>;
$('textarea').atwho({at:"#", 'data':data});
</script>
You might want to move the loading of the usernames into the controller or a helper method. The whole sniplet might belong into an view partial to keep things organized. And it might not be the best idea to load all usernames into the view when there are too many users in the database.
What I have now gives me a dropdown menu where I can only select one:
<%= form_for(#submission) do |f| %>
<%= f.collection_select :id, Submission::SUB_ID, :to_s, :to_s %>
<% end %>
where SUB_ID=[1,2,3] in model Submission
I want to implement a checkbox instead of a dropdown menu so that I can select multiple SUB_ID (i.e. 1&2 or 1&3 or 2&3 or 1&2&3). I tried to use this but it does not work:
<%= f.check_box :id, Submission::SUB_ID, :to_s, :to_s %>
Any idea?
Try this:
# view
<%= form_for(#submission) do |f| %>
<%= Submission::SUB_ID.each do |sub_id| %>
<%= f.checkbox 'ids[]', value: sub_id, checked: #submission.id == sub_id %>
<%= sub_id %>
<% end %>
<% end %>
# controller
params[:submission][:ids].each do |checked_sub_id|
# do your logic here
end
you have to iterate over SUB_ID
somehow like this...
<% Submission::SUB_ID.each do |ssid| %>
<%= f.check_box "ids[]", value: ssid %>
<% end %>
or you can use formtastic gem. it has :as=>:check_boxes input fields http://www.ruby-doc.org/gems/docs/n/nuatt-formtastic-0.2.3/Formtastic/Inputs/CheckBoxesInput.html
The core answer is you need to loop over each item in Submission::SUB_ID and make a checkbox for each id. Depending on how your models are set up and what you want to do - you may need to be much more involved in the form building. I hesitate to provide specific examples without know more about how you want the data to come back to the controller
<%= form_for(#submission) do |f| %>
<% Submission::SUB_ID.each do sub_id %>
<%= f.check_box_tag 'submission_ids[]', sub_id %>
<% end %>
<% end %>
Note that that will not default anything to checked and it does not come back as part of the submission parameters.
Usually when I have a similar situation I'm using nested forms to add or remove objects.
If you're using Rails 4, there is a new helper, collection_check_boxes, which helps streamline the building of your check boxes.
<%= f.collection_check_boxes :submission_ids, Submission::SUB_ID, :to_s, :to_s %>
Documentation:
Form builder version - which wraps...
...the general form options helper
If you look at the documentation in the second link, you'll also find how to use the optional block syntax to customise the HTML structure for each check box.
Im working with Rails 3.0.3
I want to create bills in my App. Each Bill has many entries (Material, how much of that and the Price)
The Problem i have, is that i want to write the bill and the entries and then save both at the same time. So when you click on save Bill, the Bill + each Entry should be created (saved in the db).
I can write the bill + each entry (with javascript), but i dont know how i could save both of them. Right now i can only save the bill it selft. Is it possible to pass a dynamic field via params so i can handle that in the bills controller to save? How would you implement this?
What you are looking for is called nested form, you have a main form for your bill and multiple forms that are dynamically generated as children of this general form using fields_for like this:
<% form_for #bill do |f| %>
<%= f.error_messages %>
<p>
<%= f.label :name %><br />
<%= f.text_field :name %>
</p>
<% f.fields_for :entry do |builder| %>
<%= render "entry", :f => builder %>
<% end %>
<p><%= f.submit "Submit" %></p>
<% end %>
Of course you will need some js for the dynamic creation of the different entries, here you have a couple of railscasts that will be helpfull.
Nested model form Part 1
Nested model form Part 2