I am doing something obviously wrong here, but I don't get it.
I have a partial call like so:
= render 'shared/purchase', collection: #purchases
#purchases is defined in the controller like so:
#purchases = current_user.purchases
But I get this error:
app/views/shared/_purchase.html.slim where line #3 raised:
undefined local variable or method `purchase' for #<<Class:0x007fd8ca54f970>:0x007fd8ca54eb60>
However, when I change the partial to just render the local_assigns I see this:
[:collection, #<ActiveRecord::Associations::CollectionProxy [#<Purchase id: 40, user_id: 20, purchaseable_id: 6, purchaseable_type: "PurchaseType", frequency: "Weekly", day: "Su", notes: "leave at gate", allergies: "peanuts", created_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", updated_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", size: "Normal", quantity: 2>, #<Purchase id: 41, user_id: 20, purchaseable_id: 5, purchaseable_type: "PurchaseType", frequency: "Weekly", day: "Su", notes: "leave at gate", allergies: "peanuts", created_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", updated_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", size: "Jumbo", quantity: 3>, #<Purchase id: 42, user_id: 20, purchaseable_id: 7, purchaseable_type: "PurchaseType", frequency: "Weekly", day: "Su", notes: "leave at gate", allergies: "peanuts", created_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", updated_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", size: nil, quantity: 1>, #<Purchase id: 43, user_id: 20, purchaseable_id: 8, purchaseable_type: "PurchaseType", frequency: "Weekly", day: "Su", notes: "leave at gate", allergies: "peanuts", created_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", updated_at: "2013-07-24 16:58:08", size: nil, quantity: 1>]>]
[:purchase, nil]
Why isn't each collection item getting picked up as the local variable purchase?
I'm tearing my hair out, I'm sure it's something stupid, I've done this many times before, and even compared old working code to this and I can't figure out what the problem is. Either it's a new Rails 4 thing that I'm not seeing in the docs, or I'm an idiot.
Thanks!
The Rails documentation on Layouts and Render in Rails gives an example using the partial parameter for render:
<h1>Products</h1>
<%= render partial: "product", collection: #products %>
Related
How to sort collection on parametr n_text?
abc = [108, [#<Advert id: 7095, user_id: 5, n_text: "First text", created_at: "2019-06-03 00:49:00", images_count: 0>, #<Advert id: 7096, user_id: 7, n_text: "Second text", created_at: "2019-06-03 08:23:00", images_count: 1>,...]]
abc.order_by { |k, v| v[:n_text] } dont working.
abc.last.sort_by(&:n_text)
I think this will work, .last because you are going to sort last element of the abc array.
When I call:
preivous_lessons = #item.where("track_id = ?", lesson.track_id)
I get this active record realtion:
[#<CodeLesson id: 2, name: "Python", permalink: "python", lesson_content: "", instructions: "Print your name to the console.", hints: "", starting_code: "\"\"\"\r\nThis is a comment\r\n\"\"\"\r\n\r\nprint(\"Hello, World\"...", language_id: "12", order: 1, track_id: 2, user_id: 1, created_at: "2014-02-14 16:01:12", updated_at: "2014-02-15 21:14:43", visible: true>, #<CodeLesson id: 8, name: "Test Lesson", permalink: "test-lesson", lesson_content: nil, instructions: nil, hints: nil, starting_code: nil, language_id: "26", order: nil, track_id: 2, user_id: 1, created_at: "2014-02-20 19:23:15", updated_at: "2014-02-20 19:23:15", visible: false>]
How do I convert this into a usable array of models so I can do something like this:
preivous_lessons.each do |i|
highest = i.order if i.order > highest
end
As OP confirmed from my comment, that my hint solved his problem, I am putting it as an answer to the post :
preivous_lessons = #item.where("track_id = ?", lesson.track_id)
highest = preivous_lessons.maximum(:order)
Documentation of maximum :
Calculates the maximum value on a given column. The value is returned with the same data type of the column, or nil if there's no row.
preivous_lessons = #item.where("track_id = ?", lesson.track_id).all
I have such array data:
[#<PriceList id: 463134, distributor_id: 6, brand: "Mann-filter", article_nr: "W712/22", price: 5405.0, quantity: "50", waittime: 1, description: "Фильтр масл OPEL 1.2-3.0L (OC90)", created_at: "2013-01-30 16:35:34", updated_at: "2013-01-30 16:35:34", art_group: "Фильтр масл OPEL 1.2-3.0L (OC90)", oem_number: nil>, #<PriceList id: 517164, distributor_id: 6, brand: "Mann-filter", article_nr: "W712/22", price: 5442.0, quantity: "500", waittime: 3, description: "Фильтр масляный OPEL/GM/DAEWOO", created_at: "2013-01-30 16:42:26", updated_at: "2013-01-30 16:42:26", art_group: "Фильтр масляный OPEL/GM/DAEWOO", oem_number: nil>, #<PriceList id: 463135, distributor_id: 6, brand: "Mann-filter", article_nr: "W712/22(10)", price: 5101.0, quantity: "20", waittime: 1, description: "Фильтр масл.без упак.OPEL/GM (OC90Of)", created_at: "2013-01-30 16:35:34", updated_at: "2013-01-30 16:35:34", art_group: "Фильтр масл.без упак.OPEL/GM (OC90Of)", oem_number: nil>, ... etc
how can i change price type?
i try
#non_original2 = #non_original2.map { |e| e[:price].to_i }
but as result i see only price values... How can i change my array, so that price field in all hashes become integer value?
what about
#non_original2.each { |e| e[:price] = e[:price].to_i }
This changes every PriceList item in the list (and does not copy the list).
Using your approach results in a list of price values, because map collects the result of the block. The result of e[:price].to_i is an integer (the prices you see).
I use the following query to return a list of records
Rating.find(:all, :conditions => ["rating_set = ? and product_id = ?", 1, 2186417])
which returns:
[#<Rating id: 5, label: "Good", rating: 3.0, created_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", updated_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", recommendation_id: 2186417, notes: "exact match", rating_set: 1, product_id: 2186417>, #<Rating id: 6, label: "Good", rating: 3.0, created_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", updated_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", recommendation_id: 2054442, notes: "", rating_set: 1, product_id: 2186417>, #<Rating id: 7, label: "Fair", rating: 2.0, created_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", updated_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", recommendation_id: 2403501, notes: "", rating_set: 1, product_id: 2186417>, #<Rating id: 8, label: "Bad", rating: 3.0, created_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", updated_at: "2013-02-20 08:11:36", recommendation_id: 2344645, notes: "", rating_set: 1, product_id: 2186417>]
How can I get a count for each rating label. For example, how many records out of the total are "Good" or how many are "Bad" etc.
You can do that in at least 2 ways.
SQL
klass = Rating.where(rating_set: 1, product_id: 2186417])
good_count = klass.where(label: 'Good').count
bad_count = klass.where(label: 'Bad').count
Array
ratings = Rating.where(rating_set: 1, product_id: 2186417]).all
good_count = ratings.count { |r| r.label == 'Good' }
bad_count = ratings.count { |r| r.label == 'Bad' }
You could try a group by:
Rating.where(:rating_set => 1, :product_id => 2186417).group(:label).count.each{ |k,v| puts "#{k} #{v}" }
Resource: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html#group
I need to join output of a hash into a string.
The hash looks like this:
nas.location.walledgardens.to_s
=> "[#<Walledgarden id: 1, location_id: 12, url: \"polka.com\", created_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\", updated_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\">, #<Walledgarden id: 2, location_id: 12, url: \"test.com\", created_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\", updated_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\">, #<Walledgarden id: 3, location_id: 12, url: \"help.com\", created_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\", updated_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\">, #<Walledgarden id: 4, location_id: 12, url: \"yell.com\", created_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\", updated_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\">, #<Walledgarden id: 5, location_id: 12, url: \"sausage.com\", created_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\", updated_at: \"2012-05-14 17:02:47\">]"
I need to join the url values into the following format:
polka.com,test.com,help.com
What the best way to do this? I can easily look through it but the output has line breaks and I need these removed plus the commas.
nas.location.walledgardens.collect { |w| w.url }.join(",")
The .collect method will collect all what that block returns and put it in an array, and then the join puts that array in a string, separated by whatever you give it (so a comma).
What you have is not a Hash, but an Array of Walledgarden objects (they look to be ActiveRecord::Base subclasses).
Try this:
nas.location.walledgardens.collect(&:url).join ","
(Note: #map and #collect are equivalent, so which one you choose should be a consideration of readability!)
Use Array#map:
nas.location.walledgardens.map(&:url).join ','