Preventing Rails to reaload assets in popup - ruby-on-rails

In my Rails 4 (with assets pipeline), I have a Profile page that allows user to open a popup by clicking a link. My Javascript looks like this:
jQuery('.popupHolder').load($this.attr("href"), function () {do_something})
where href is defined as: update_user_path and attached to a div in my page.
My issue is: when the Profile page is loaded, all assets are also loaded. When user clicks the link, the browser makes a request to users_controller#update, and thus load all the assets again.
(If the popup page was just a static html file, it would not reload assets).
How do I prevent Rails to reload assets in this case?

When you say "reloading assets", do you mean that the HTML for the popup ends up including your site header and footer (so a whole page) rather than just an HTML snippet? If that's the case, you need to tell that controller action (update) not to load the layout. Put render layout: false or add layout: false to the hash passed to render, and your action will respond just with the HTML in the template and no surrounding layout.
There's some useful info about layouts and rendering in the Rails Guides: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/layouts_and_rendering.html

Related

Rails: How to refresh page and run the script automatically when I redirect to a page

I have a html page with a script, It looks like
<html>
</html>
<script>
<script>
The page needs to run this script to display the content correctly.
But when I redirect to this page with following code:
redirect_to user_trips_path(params[:user_id])
I noticed that it will not refresh the page. If I refresh the page manually it will display the content correctly.
My question is how to make this automatic?
I try to google this question.
There are unlimited ways to refresh a page - but some helpful aspect of your situation:
1- html tag:
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="30">
w3schools link
put it on your html or inject it with JS after page load.
2- JavaScript or jQuery:
How do I refresh a page using JavaScript?
3- if you have View on your Rails app you can create a route and method for run sample_name.js.erb and then in this file with some JS code you can open your partial and main .html.erb file
--
If after the first time you want to run a script to start to refresh the page you can redirect users with special param in user_trips_path and then in your JS code check if its present then run your code.
In Rails 7
If you want to disable Turbo Drive you can set Turbo.session.drive = false in your javascript/application.js file.
import { Turbo } from "#hotwired/turbo-rails"
Turbo.session.drive = false
=> It will reload the page while navigating

React Component not rendered properly with Turbolinks in Rails 5.1

I have a very simple Rails app with a react component that just displays "Hello" in an existing div element in a particular page (let's say the show page).
When I load the related page using its URL, it works. I see Hello on the page.
However, when I'm previously on another page (let's say the index page and then I go to the show page using Turbolinks, well, the component is not rendered, unless I go back and forth again. (going back to the index Page and coming back to the show page)
From here every time I go back and forth, I can say that the view is rendered twice more time.Not only twice but twice more time! (i.e. 2 times then 4, then 6 etc..)
I know that since in the same time I set the content of the div I output a message to the console.
In fact I guess that going back to the index page should still run the component code without the display since the div element is not on the index page. But why in a cumulative manner?
The problems I want to solve are:
To get the code run on the first request of the show page
To block the code from running in other pages (including the index page)
To get the code run once on subsequent requests of the show page
Here the exact steps and code I used (I'll try to be as concise as possible.)
I have a Rails 5.1 app with react installed with:
rails new myapp --webpack=react
I then create a simple Item scaffold to get some pages to play with:
rails generate scaffold Item name
I just add the following div element in the Show page (app/views/items/show.html.erb):
<div id=hello></div>
Webpacker already generated a Hello component (hello_react.jsx) that I modified as following in ordered to use the above div element. I changed the original 'DOMContentLoaded' event:
document.addEventListener('turbolinks:load', () => {
console.log("DOM loaded..");
var element = document.getElementById("hello");
if(element) {
ReactDOM.render(<Hello name="React" />, element)
}
})
I then added the following webpack script tag at the bottom of the previous view (app/views/items/show.html.erb):
<%= javascript_pack_tag("hello_react") %>
I then run the rails server and the webpack-dev-server using foreman start (installed by adding gem 'foreman' in the Gemfile) . Here is the content of the Procfile I used:
web: bin/rails server -b 0.0.0.0 -p 3000
webpack: bin/webpack-dev-server --port 8080 --hot
And here are the steps to follow to reproduce the described behavior:
Load the index page using the URL http://localhost:3000/items
Click New Item to add a new item. Rails redirects to the item's show page at the URL localhost:3000/items/1. Here we can see the Hello React! message. It works well!
Reload the index page using the URL http://localhost:3000/items. The item is displayed as expected.
Reload the show page using the URL http://localhost:3000/items/1. The Hello message is displayed as expected with one console message.
Reload the index page using the URL http://localhost:3000/items
Click to the Show link (should be performed via turbolink). The message is not shown neither the console message.
Click the Back link (should be performed via turbolink) to go to the index page.
Click again to the Show link (should be performed via turbolink). This time the message is well displayed. The console message for its part is shown twice.
From there each time I go back to the index and come back again to the show page displays two more messages at the console each time.
Note: Instead of using (and replacing) a particular div element, if I let the original hello_react file that append a div element, this behavior is even more noticeable.
Edit: Also, if I change the link_to links by including data: {turbolinks: false}. It works well. Just as we loaded the pages using the URLs in the browser address bar.
I don't know what I'm doing wrong..
Any ideas?
Edit: I put the code in the following repo if interested to try this:
https://github.com/sanjibukai/react-turbolinks-test
This is quite a complex issue, and I am afraid I don't think it has a straightforward answer. I will explain as best I can!
To get the code run on the first request of the show page
Your turbolinks:load event handler is not running because your code is run after the turbolinks:load event is triggered. Here is the flow:
User navigates to show page
turbolinks:load triggered
Script in body evaluated
So the turbolinks:load event handler won't be called (and therefore your React component won't be rendered) until the next page load.
To (partly) solve this you could remove the turbolinks:load event listener, and call render directly:
ReactDOM.render(
<Hello name="React" />,
document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('div'))
)
Alternatively you could use <%= content_for … %>/<%= yield %> to insert the script tag in the head. e.g. in your application.html.erb layout
…
<head>
…
<%= yield :javascript_pack %>
…
</head>
…
then in your show.html.erb:
<%= content_for :javascript_pack, javascript_pack_tag('hello_react') %>
In both cases, it is worth nothing that for any HTML you add to the page with JavaScript in a turbolinks:load block, you should remove it on turbolinks:before-cache to prevent duplication issues when revisiting pages. In your case, you might do something like:
var div = document.createElement('div')
ReactDOM.render(
<Hello name="React" />,
document.body.appendChild(div)
)
document.addEventListener('turbolinks:before-cache', function () {
ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode(div)
})
Even with all this, you may still encounter duplication issues when revisiting pages. I believe this is to do with the way in which previews are rendered, but I have not been able to fix it without disabling previews.
To get the code run once on subsequent requests of the show page
To block the code from running in other pages (including the index page)
As I have mentioned above, including page-specific scripts dynamically can create difficulties when using Turbolinks. Event listeners in a Turbolinks app behave very differently to that without Turbolinks, where each page gets a new document and therefore the event listeners are removed automatically. Unless you manually remove the event listener (e.g. on turbolinks:before-cache), every visit to that page will add yet another listener. What's more, if Turbolinks has cached that page, a turbolinks:load event will fire twice: once for the cached version, and another for the fresh copy. This is probably why you were seeing it rendered 2, 4, 6 times.
With this in mind, my best advice is to avoid adding page-specific scripts to run page-specific code. Instead, include all your scripts in your application.js manifest file, and use the elements on your page to determine whether a component gets mounted. Your example does something like this in the comments:
document.addEventListener('turbolinks:load', () => {
var element = document.getElementById("hello");
if(element) {
ReactDOM.render(<Hello name="React" />, element)
}
})
If this is included in your application.js, then any page with a #hello element will get the component.
Hope that helps!
I was struggling with similar problem (link_to helper method was changing URL but react content was not loaded; had to refresh page manually to load it properly). After some googling I've found simple workaround on this page.
<%= link_to "Foo", new_rabbit_path(#rabbit), data: { turbolinks: false } %>
Since this causes a full page refresh when the link is clicked, now my react pages are loaded properly. Maybe you will find it useful in your project as well :)
Upon what you said I tested some code.
First, I simply pull out the ReactDOM.render method from the listener as you suggested in your first snippet.
This provide a big step forward since the message is no longer displayed elsewhere (like in the index page) but only in the show page as wanted.
But something interesting happen in the show page. There is no more accumulation of the message as appended div element, which is good. In fact it's even displayed once as wanted. But.. The console message is displayed twice!?
I guess that something related to the caching mechanism is going on here, but since the message is supposed to be appended why it isn't displayed twice as the console message?
Putting aside this issue, this seems to work and I wonder why it's necessary in the first place to put the React rendering after the page is loaded (without Turbolinks there was the DOMContentLoaded event listener)?
I guess that this has do with unexpected rendering by javascript code executed when some DOM elements are yet to be loaded.
Then, I tried your alternative way using <%= content_for … %>/<%= yield %>.
And as you expected this give mitigate results ans some weird behavior.
When I load via the URL the index page and then go to the show page using the Turbolink, it works!
The div message as well as the console message are shown once.
Then if I go back (using Turbolink), the div message is gone and I got the ".. unmounted.." console message as wanted.
But from then on, whenever I go back to the show page, the div and the console message are both never displayed at all.
The only message that's displayed is the ".. unmounted.." console message whenever I go back to the index page.
Worse, if I load the show page using the URL, the div message is not displayed anymore!? The console message is displayed but I got an error regarding the div element (Cannot read property 'appenChild' of null).
I will not deny that I completely ignore what's happening here..
Lastly, I tried your last best advice and simply put the last code snippet in the HTML head.
Since this is jsx code, I don't know how to handle it within the Rails asset pipeline / file structure, so I put my javascript_pack_tag in the html head.
And indeed, this works well.
This time the code is executed everywhere so it makes sense to use page-specific element (as previously intended in the commented code).
The downside, is that this time the code could be messy unless I put all page-specific code inside if statements that test for the presence of the page-specific element.
However since Rails/Webpack has a good code structure, it should be easily manageable to put page-specific code into page-specific jsxfiles.
Nevertheless the benefit is that this time all the page-specific parts are rendered at the same time as the whole page, thus avoiding a display glitch that occurs otherwise.
I didn't address this issue at the first place, but indeed, I would like to know how to get page specific contents rendered at the same time as the whole page.
I don't know if this is possible when combining Turbolink with React (or any other framework).
But in conclusion I leave this question for later on.
Thank you for your contribution Dom..

How to call a Header (an ERB) in my application body index ? (RoR)

im trying to make a web page in Ruby on Rails but im having some problem trying to split my page into various ERB files to split my page in: head,foot and body, now my question is how can i call each one of my views, in my body page to build the entire web page. thanks!
Let's say you have a _header.html.erb, you call it inside you application.html.erb by typing 'render 'header' (without the underscore) in your body tag

Using a single html template for Rail view and Angular Template

I have a Ruby on Rails app that loads a single page Angular JS Web App when the user is logged in, and serves static info pages via RoR views when the user is not logged in.
The angular templates are in 'app/assets/templates/' and the rails files are in 'app/views'.
I have a text heavy html page that I would like re-use with both rails and angular. I've tried accessing the rails view from my angular $routeProvider, setting templateURL to the path of the view. This causes more than one instance of angular to load and it gets stuck in a loop.
app.config ($routeProvider) ->
$routeProvider.when('/features/',
templateUrl: '/views/features.html'
)
I've tried rendering the file in my assets/templates folder through a rails view. That doesn't work either since rails can't find the partial.
= render 'assets/templates/features.html'
Does anyone know how I might be able to use a single template for both?
I'm mot sure what exactly you mean by text heavy page. But what about other solution - extract all text to JSON file with keys (some sort of translation file). For example:
{ "title1": "Title", "paragraph1": "lore up sum. .." }
Then you can load this JSON in your rails controller and pass it to view that render text parts from it.
<h1><%= #text ['title1'] %></h1>
<p><%= #text['paragraph1'] %></p>
And as well load JSON as resource in your angular app and pass it to view.
<h1>{{ text.title1 }}</h1>
<p>{{ text.paragraph1 }}</p>
If your text is somehow structured you can make use if it and automate the view with loops, conditions etc and so save repeated parts even more.

ASP.Net MVC partial views

I have a menu (jquery-ui accordion with Html.ActionLink as menu options). How can I render a partial view in the main content <div> of the parent view, when selecting a menu option?
I can render the partial view, but not inside the main content <div>. Should I use Html.ActionLink in my menu options?
I don't believe action links will help you, but they are a step in the right direction.
The pattern you've put to play thus far:
link: /articles/sports Main Area
link: /articles/local_news
The two links along the left edge are your ActionLinks rendered to the page as normal links. When clicked, they'll simply post back to the server and your entire page will be wiped out.
What you want to do is to hit the server for content and simply use that content within a container somewhere on your page. To do this, you can render ordinary links with onclick handlers that post asynchronously to the server to retrieve partial content, which can then be used to set the main DIV's content.
For example, this can be declared in your View:
<a href="javascript:{Load('<%= Url.Action("Sports", "Articles") %>');}">
Sports
</a>
Note the use of the Url.Action helper method to leverage route data to properly form outbound urls.
On the client (this uses jQuery, though any other library or JavaScript will do):
function Load(url)
{
$.post
(
url,
null,
function(data)
{
$("#mainDIV").html(data);
},
"html"
);
}
I'm using $.post instead of $.get to sidestep browser caching issues.

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