If I have Javascrips/CSS files from an ASP .NET Project and I want to put them in my Rails project. Where's the best place to put them? Do I need to change every url into <%= asset_path "img" %>?
Put it in assets folder and add below line in views:
To add CSS files:
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "test.css" %>
To add JavaScript files:
<%= javascript_include_tag 'test.js'%>
Building on #Unknown's answer:
Yes, you do need to use asset_path, or one of the sprocket helpers, to refer to your assets in your CSS file so that they will properly include the MD5 fingerprint. Plus, this way you get the right asset between development and production (since they don't live in public while in development). Here's the relevant guide: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/asset_pipeline.html#coding-links-to-assets
According to http://railsapps.github.io/rails-javascript-include-external.html
The best practise for DRY and speed (according to article above) is to download all files to your projects assets folders, put them in the assets pipe for each application.js/.css and let rails compile them into one application.js and application.css in production mode. There are several ways to do this in detail (see link) The preferred way according to article for speed and DRY-practise is to call all js and css from application.css/.js and not put stylesheet_link_tag, calling css or js from view-files. This even though you may have one specific user.js which you only want to use on users page. Though there are ways to load specific files into specific views (see article for details)
Ecxept from having to call them in once in head of application.html(.haml/.erb):
= stylesheet_link_tag "application", :media => "all"
= javascript_include_tag "application"
If you are calling files in css eg. an image, as long as you have the image in "assets/images" you only need to refer to the images as 'image.jpg' in your css/js-files.
Related
This is a question that several people have asked before, but none of the questions were quite asked or answered in a way that I found helpful, so I'm writing the question and answer that I would have found helpful.
I have a Rails 3.1+ app using the asset pipeline. There's one specific action that I want to have use different CSS. (In my specific case, I have a page that is intended to be printed, so it truly needs completely different CSS and does not need any Javascript.) Currently, I have only one application-specific CSS file. How do I add the new CSS file and direct the asset pipeline to use my file?
For example, right now, my app/assets looks like
app/assets
/javascript
application.js
custom.js.coffee
/css
application.css
custom.css.scss
I want to add a print.css file that is used by the view of a specific action. This view will not use the application.css file. How do I add print.css?
I found this blog post to be very helpful: http://blog.seancarpenter.net/2012/11/05/page-specific-javascript-with-the-asset-pipeline/. My answer paraphrases what this blogger already wrote and fills in a few missing details.
First, it's important that you've read and understood the Rails Guide to the Asset Pipeline. Unfortunately, this guide doesn't clearly explain how to add action-specific assets, but it does cover some concepts you need to know. Made sure you understand these ideas:
That the asset pipeline compiles Javascript, CSS, and other assets so that Rails servers can cache assets for better performance.
That manifest files use commands like require, require_tree, and require_self to indicate which files are compiled together.
That in order for the asset pipeline to work properly in production, you need to manually run rake assets:precompile to produce the compiled, minified assets in the public directory.
These ideas are the minimum "need-to-know" pieces of information about the asset pipeline. If you don't already understand these ideas, you don't have an "expert or enthusiast" level of knowledge about the pipeline, and unfortunately, SO isn't the right place to learn this stuff. Fortunately, the the Rails Guide to the Asset Pipeline is a short 15-minute read and can get you up to speed quickly if you need it.
Second, these are the changes you need to make in order to ensure that the asset pipeline correctly sees and handles your new print.css file.
Follow these steps:
Add your print.css file to app/assets/css.
You'll need to create a manifest file that will show Rails where to find print.css. You need to do this, even though you only have a single CSS file you're adding. This is an easy step:
Add a file called print.js to app/assets/javascript.
Add this line to print.js:
//= require print
This will be the only line in the entire print.js file. If I understand correctly, Rails expects manifest files to have the file extension .js, which is why we aren't using print.css as the manifest file.
We now need to instruct Rails to find and use the print.js manifest. Add the following line in your config/application.rb file:
config.assets.precompile += %w( print.js )
We're almost finished! However, the already-present application.js manifest includes the line //= require_tree . which means that it will include your print.css file. This will cause your print.css styling to affect your entire site, not just the single view. There are two ways of dealing with this:
If application.js and print.js do not share any assets, you can use the stub command in your application.js to exclude the assets used in print.js. What this does is instruct application.js to remove any of the assets that print.js references from its own list of referenced files. Our modified application.js looks like:
(snip...)
require_tree .
stub print
See this answer for more information.
If your print.js and application.js files share some assets, you'll need to move all of the assets used by application.js into subdirectories. I didn't do this myself, so I'm not the most help in this area. Look at this answer for instructions.
Now we have included print.css in the asset pipeline. We now need to direct Rails to use print.css in your specific view.
Let's say your action is in the reports controller, and that the action is named print_reports. This means we have a reports_controller.rb file and a print_reports.html.erb (or .haml) file. We need to make several changes to these files.
To start, add a new layout in app/views/layouts. Perhaps call it print.html.erb. We'll use this new layout for your print_reports.html.erb file. Set it up as you desire. For a page intended to be printed, this will likely be very simple, such as
<html>
<head>
<title="Print">
</head>
<body>
<%= yield %>
</body>
</html>
Using a separate layout the disadvantage that it's difficult to keep this layout and the layout used by the rest of the application in sync, but if you are using separate CSS files for the action, it's unlikely that you want the layout to be the same anyway.
Add a stylesheet_link_tag in the layout's header pointing to your print.css:
<html>
<head>
<title="Print"/>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "print" %>
</head>
<body>
<%= yield %>
</body>
</html>
In the controller, we'll tell Rails to use our new layout for the action. Add the line layout 'print', only: [:print_reports] to your controller:
class reports_controller < ApplicationController
layout 'print', only: [:print_reports]
#snip
See this question for more information and a few different approaches.
At this point, when you run the app, your print_reports action should be using print.css correctly!
Remember to run rake assets:precompile before deploying on the server.
Official Solution
It is documented in the official Rails Guides here: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/asset_pipeline.html#controller-specific-assets
Actually you can leave out the require_tree directive (located in application.css and application.js) then use this in your template:
For controller specific JavaScript:
<%= javascript_include_tag params[:controller] %>
For controller specific CSS:
<%= stylesheet_link_tag params[:controller] %>
All of you are putting very complicated answers.
1 Go to app/assets/stylesheets
2.Make a file with the extension .css
3.Go to config/initializers/assets.rb
4.Put this line of of code Rails.application.config.assets.precompile += %w( file.css )
5.Replace file.css with the file you created
6.Go to your html.erb file
7.Type this in the <head>, <%= stylesheet_link_tag "file" %>
8.Replace file with the filename(no extension in the name)
Good Job you linked the file!
There's one specific action that I want to have use different CSS.
Here's an alternative way to accomplish what you're looking for:
Add the controller name and action name to the app body in your /views/layouts/application.html.rb:
<body class="<%= controller_name %>-<%= action_name %>">
<%= yield %>
</body>
Then in your .scss file:
.controller_name-action_name {
// your css goes here
}
So if your controller was static_pages and your action was home:
.static_pages-home {
// your css goes here
}
Tada! Your css only appears for that specific action.
In your layout
<head>
// ...
<%= yield :stylesheets %>
</head>
In your view
<%= provide :stylesheets do %>
// your page-specific css
<% end %>
So I'm kinda lost here. All my CSS/SCSS files are loaded everywhere on my app. But I have two different design (front and back) that I want to separate. How can I achieve that ?
Plus it's kinda useless that all js/css are loaded, even where they are not used. How can I control that ?
What you're wanting to do is control your layouts.
As your question is currently it's too broad for someone to give you a decent specific answer, it's like saying 'tell me about astrophysics, I don't understand how to launch a rocket right now'.
I would suggest to start with the rails guides relating to layouts and then come back with a more specific question once you have a better understanding.
http://guides.rubyonrails.org/layouts_and_rendering.html
There is also a great 11 minute video on RailsCasts which will help you understand and control the assets pipeline: http://railscasts.com/episodes/279-understanding-the-asset-pipeline
Where you are heading is say your app was about managing projects.
Make a copy of the application.css file called say project-manifest.css and use the same structure as that application.css for loading just the stylesheets you want.
Make a copy of views/layouts/application.html.erb to say projects-layout.html.erb
In the new projecs-layout file, update the reference to the css to point to project-manifest.css
Point your controller code to use your new layout
say you have:
# app/controllers/ProjectsController.rb
def show
# code here
# rails does a default render layout: 'application', its overwritten by adding an explict render
render layout: 'project-layout'
end
In your application.js and application.css there is a directive by default: require_tree. It will load all your js and css files to be precompiled later. This is done to make the clients to download the assets packet only once (as it will be cached by the browser) and make the app faster.
If you want to load specific javascript or stylesheet files for each controller, remove the require_tree directive and include them in their respective controller:
<%= javascript_include_tag params[:controller] %> or <%= stylesheet_link_tag params[:controller] %>
Check this out: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/asset_pipeline.html#controller-specific-assets
Due to a specific setup, I would like to split the compiled stylesheets in two files. This is because (a part of) the CSS is needed for a Java application which can parse the CSS, but it is a bit buggy and can't handle some css-(hack)-syntax. Because I am unable to modify this Java application, I want to feed it only the CSS which it needs and of which I can make sure it is correct.
So, normally the assets pipeline would produce just one '/assets/application-[..].css' file. It would to let it also generate '/assets/custom-[..].css', based on a file selection I make. This still can be pre-compiled.
Is there a way to do this? Although I understand this is not the ideal setup..
To tell rails about additional files you wish to have precompiled, you can add them to the config.assets.precompile setting.
config.assets.precompile += ["other_application.css"]
You only see application.css in your HTML because that's the only file you're including
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "application" %>
If you have some custom.css.scss in your apps/assets/stylesheets directory, it will be compiled just like application.css.
For example, I might have
- _common.css.scss
- application.css.erb.scss
- other_application.css.erb.scss
in app/assets/stylesheets. In the top of the non-partial files I will put
#import "common";
to include _common.css.scss. I can now reference either stylesheet independent of one another in a layout.
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "application" %>
# or
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "other_application" %>
I know that most CSS codes go under app/assets/stylesheets, but I have some snippets of CSS codes that are specific to only certain pages. For now, I just have these small CSS codes included in the view files, but I feel like there's ought to be a better way of handling this.
Any suggestion?
Rails convention is to put these in controller specific CSS files:
For example, if a ProjectsController is generated, there will be a new
file at app/assets/javascripts/projects.js.coffee and another at
app/assets/stylesheets/projects.css.scss. You should put any
JavaScript or CSS unique to a controller inside their respective asset
files, as these files can then be loaded just for these controllers
with lines such as <%= javascript_include_tag params[:controller] %>
or <%= stylesheet_link_tag params[:controller] %>.
Putting the CSS inside the views isn't a good idea as you lose features (fingerprinting, auto minification) that the asset management in Rails provides.
Read more here: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/asset_pipeline.html#how-to-use-the-asset-pipeline
How do I use CSS with RoR? When I link externally, I'm never able to see the files. I cp'd the .css file to every folder I could think of...views, controller, template, and nothing seems to work.
What do I need to do to enable external CSS files with a rails application? I'm new to rails, so forgive me if this is basic.
Put the CSS files in public/stylesheets and then use:
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "filename" %>
to link to the stylesheet in your layouts or erb files in your views.
Similarly you put images in public/images and javascript files in public/javascripts.
If you are using rails > 3 version, then there is a concept called asset pipeline. You could add your CSS to
app/assets/stylesheets
then it will automatically be picked up by the app. (this is useful as rails will automatically compress the CSS files)
read more here about the asset pipeline
Use the rails style sheet tag to link your main.css like this
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "main" %>
Go to
config/initializers/assets.rb
Once inside the assets.rb add the following code snippet just below the Rails.application.config.assets.version = '1.0'
Rails.application.config.assets.version = '1.0'
Rails.application.config.assets.precompile += %w( main.css )
Restart your server.
I did the following...
place your css file in the app/assets/stylesheets folder.
Add the stylesheet link <%= stylesheet_link_tag "filename" %> in your default layouts file (most likely application.html.erb)
I recommend this over using your public folder. You can also reference the stylesheet inline, such as in your index page.
The original post might have been true back in 2009, but now it is actually incorrect now, and no linking is even required for the stylesheet as I see mentioned in some of the other responses. Rails will now do this for you by default.
Place any new sheet .css (or other) in app/assets/stylesheets
Test your server with rails-root/scripts/rails server and you'll see the link is added by rails itself.
You can test this with a path in your browser like testserverpath:3000/assets/filename_to_test.css?body=1
To add to the above, the most obvious place to add stylesheet_link_tag is in your global application layout - application.html.erb.
With Rails 6.0.0, create your "stylesheet.css" stylesheet at app/assets/stylesheets.
Have you tried putting it in your public folder? Whenever I have images or the like that I need to reference externally, I put it all there.