How do I Change the URL for the view in the controller.
In my controller I generate an ID which I want to display
in the URL of the browser when the view is rendered.
For example, when I enter / in my browser, it should redirect me
to /test/1. The ID is generated randomly by the controller.
So when I access / the 2nd time it could redirect me to /test/3.
I tried to do a match route in my routes.rb file.
But I couldn't find a solution.
routes.rb
get 'test/run'
root to: 'test#run'
match '/test/:id', to: 'test#run'
How about that:
class TestController
def show
...
end
def run
redirect_to Test.random
end
end
Of course, you have to write random scope for your Test model.
You may find helpful this question also - Random record in ActiveRecord
P.S. I'm not sure that the Test is a good name for your model. It could be already used by ruby or rails.
Related
I'm real beginner in Rails.
I created app/services/xclass.rb class with some_method inside.
I need to execute some_method using url.
For example, I want run this method when I execute in my browser url - http://application.com/notifications/send
I think it could be done through controller (notifications_controller) but how to do it?
I created only controller, with no model, just for launching some_method.
first, create a route:
get "notifications/send" => "notifications#some_action", :as => "send_notification"
Then create a controller action in your controller (ie. NotificationsController):
def some_action
Xclass.some_method # run the method you want
redirect_to root_path # redirect or whatever you want here
end
Now you can either visit the path http://your_app.com/notifications/send, or link to is using 'send_notifications_path' url helper in rails.
That should do it
Since you're a beginner, let me give you some ideas
MVC
Firstly, you need to appreciate that Rails is an MVC (model view controller) framework:
In short, this means that every time you send a "request" to Rails, it will be "routed" to the specific controller action which corresponds with that route.
This means that when you ask about how to fire a "class method", you're going to have to work within the confines of the MVC programming pattern. Here's how:
#config/routes.rb
resources :notifications do
get :send, on: :collection #=> domain.com/notifications/send
end
#app/controllers/notifications_controller.rb
class NotificationsController < ApplicationController
def send
#call your class method here
YourModel.class_method
end
end
#app/lib/your_model.rb
class YourModel
def self.class_method
#do something here
end
end
--
Rails
This is further supported by the fact that Rails is just a framework - in fact it's a gem (a great one) which runs on top of Ruby.
This means that even though some of the ways in which Rails works might seem somewhat alien to begin with, you have to remember that it basically just captures "requests" fed to it by a web sever, processing them with connectivity to the database etc.
The issue here is that as you're sending the request over HTTP, you have to work within the constraints of this protocol (specifically that it's stateless), and with Rails. As mentioned, Rails is MVC-based, which means that every request will be routed to your controller, which is why you have to create the corresponding route & controller action to handle it
If you use the code above (tweaked to your app), it should work for you
I have to modify the routes file in order to have SEO improvement.
This is my context, a rails backend generate a JSON feed with the route's name in, I have to read it and change the default name.
For example, I have this:
get '/people' => 'people#show', as: :people
and I'd like to change /people in some value read from my JSON feed.
I created a class to get the JSON object in my app
class JSONDatabase
def initialize(kind_of_site)
#kind_of_site = kind_of_site
end
def fetch_database_remote(url)
JSON.parse(open(url).read)
end
end
but how can i access it in routes file?
Thank you
You don't necessarily need to modify your application's routes. What you can do is define a wild card route that leads to a unique controller where you read the updated route. This approach is kind of hackish but gives you the unlimited routes you need without modifying the routes.
Your config/routes.rb file would look something like this:
resources :defined_models
root to: 'controller#action'
# At last we define the wildcard route
get '/:route' => 'routing_controller#routing_action'
Then, at this routing action we can do the job of seeing if this route (now defined in the params[:route] variable) corresponds to the modified one. Just remember to redirect to a 404 if the route given is not defined, since with this approach you loose the Rails default way of dealing with undefined routes.
I have a controller, clients_controller, with corresponding index, show, edit, delete, new & form views. Is there a way to create a new view like clients/prospects.html.erb that acts the same way as clients/index.html.erb, except is routed at clients/prospects/?
I've tried this:
match '/clients/prospects' => 'clients#prospects'
And some other things in routes.rb, but of course get the error "Couldn't find Client with id=prospects".
The goal here is basically to have a prospects view and a clients view, and by simply switching the hidden field to a 1, it (in the user's mind) turns a prospect into a client (it's a CRM-like app).
There's a couple of things you need to do. First you need to put the your custom route before any generic route. Otherwise Rails assumes the word "prospects" is an id for the show action. Example:
get '/clients/prospects' => 'clients#prospects' # or match for older Rails versions
resources :clients
Also you need to copy / paste the index method in your ClientsController and name it prospects. Example:
class ClientsController < ApplicationController
def index
#clients = Client.where(prospect: false)
end
def prospects
#prospects = Client.where(prospect: true)
end
end
Lastly, you need to copy the index.html.erb view and name the copy prospects.html.erb. In the example above you would have to work with the #prospects instance variable.
Create a new action in clients controller named prospects. And then define a collection route in routes.rb for it as either resource full way. Or u directly use match as you were doing.
What you're doing is not wrong (although I'd change match to get, otherwise POST and DELETE requests to that url will also render your prospects view). Presumably you have
resources :clients
in your routes file? If so, what you have will probably work if you just move the line you quoted above the resources declaration -- the problem is that /clients/prospects matches the show route for the clients resource, so if it's defined first then that's the route that gets matched.
However, there's a more idiomatic way to define this route
resources :clients do
collection do
get :prospects
end
end
See Rails Routing documentation for more
Also see migu's answer for what else needs to be done once the url is being routed correctly (though there are other things you can do -- if you the two views are similar enough, you can reuse the view template, for example).
i have a task to create mapping of different urls at run time .
In the application i have a GUI interface which displays list of routes from routes.rb file.
User has the ability to change that url to some different name from the interface
eg. (abc/mno) --user can change them to --(hello)
so if user type /hello in the browser request is redirected to /abc/mno
i have to store those mapped routes in a database.
how to add a dynamic mapped route to already defined routes(routes.rb) while creating a new record in database
how to add routes from the database while loading routes.rb file.
i am not able to figure out how to extend the default router so that it can include routes from the database ..
I don't have a complete solution for you, but you can start with two approaches:
Use custom URL constraint: Dynamic URL -> Controller mapping for routes in Rails
Use Rack middleware: Dynamic Rails routing based on database
If you don't want to use rack middleware, you can use constraints. Hopefully, your dynamic routes are scoped to something, like "/abc/anything-after-here-can-be-dynamic", as opposed to straight off the root...
So, lets say you wanted dynamic routes based upon User's first name, then you would do the following:
#config/routes.rb
match '/abc/:route' => "abc#dynamicroute", :contraints => DynamicRouteConstraint.new
#lib/dynamic_route_constraint.rb
class DynamicRouteConstraint < Struct.new
def matches?(request)
User.find_by_first_name(request.params[:route]).present?
end
end
#app/controllers/abc_controller.rb
class AbcController < ApplicationController
def dynamicroute
#user = User.find_by_first_name(params[:route])
#render or redirect, however you wish
end
end
I am using ruby on rails to make a simple social networking site that includes different message boards for each committee of a student group. I want the url structure for each board to look like https://<base_url>/boards/<committee_name> and this will bring the user to the message board for that committee.
My routes.rb file looks like:
resources :committees, only: [:index]
match '/boards/:name', to: 'committees#index(name)'
My index function of committees_controller.rb file looks like:
def index(name)
#posts = Committee.where(name: name)
end
And then I'll use the #posts variable on the page to display all of the posts, but right now when I navigate to https://<base_url>/boards/<committee_name> I get an Unknown Action error, and it says The action 'index(name)' could not be found for CommitteesController.
Could someone guide me through what I have done wrong?
Once I get this working, how would I make a view that reflects this url structure?
Set up your routes like this:
resources :committees, only: [:index]
match '/boards/:name', to: 'committees#show'
and the controller like this:
def index
#committees = Committee.all
end
def show
#committee = Committee.find_by_name!(params[:name])
end
You can't really pass arguments to controller actions the way you were trying to with index(name). Instead, you use the params hash that Rails provides you. The :name part of the route declaration tells Rails to put whatever matches there into params[:name].
You also should be using separate actions for the listing of committees and displaying single committees. Going by Rails conventions, these should be the index and show actions, respectively.
When routing, you only specify the method name, not the arguments:
match '/boards/:name', to: 'committees#show'
Generally you will declare something with resources or match but not both. To stay REST-ful, this should be the show method. Index is a collection method, usually not taking any sort of record identifier.
Arguments always come in via the params structure:
def show
#posts = Committee.where(name: params[:name])
end
Controller methods that are exposed via routes do not take arguments. You may construct private methods that do take arguments for other purposes.