I'm trying to make a simple link that will toggle my "status" attribute in my model from "pending" to "active". For example, when I first create a user, I set the status to "pending". Then when I show the list of users, I add a button that should change that user's status to "active". I tried this via a custom action (is this a good approach?) but I'm having trouble with the auto-generated named route.
in my user index.html.haml:
button_to "Manually Activate", activate_user_path
in routes.rb:
resources :users do
get :activate, :on => :member
in users_controller.rb:
def activate
#user = User.find(params[:id])
#user.update_attribute(:status, 'Active')
redirect_to #user
end
this seems to work when I go to say, /users/1/activate, as the status will update. However, the /users page doesn't show and gives me error:
ActionController::RoutingError in Users#index
No route matches {:action=>"activate", :controller=>"users"}
ie, it is having a problem with the activate_user_path I specified in my view. (However if I use another named-routes-style path that I haven't specified in my routes.rb to test it out, I get
NameError in Users#index
undefined local variable or method `blahblah_user_url' for #<#<Class:0x00000102bd5d50>:0x00000102bb9588>
so it seems that it knows it's in the routes.rb but something else is wrong? I'm really new to rails and would appreciate the help!
thanks!
Your link should look like this:
button_to "Manually Activate", activate_user_path(#user)
You need to add what user you want to activate.
A number of problems, I can see.
Firstly you should NOT update the database using a GET request.
Secondly button_to will provide you with an inplace form which when clicked will POST to your app.
Thirdly, the way you have your routes setup, you need to provide the user in the path (you've tested it by forming the url in the browser already).
run
rake routes
on the command prompt to see how your routes look and the name you can use to generate those routes.
I suspect you need to use
button_to "Manually Activate", activate_user_path(user)
(user or #user or whatever is the user object). In your button_to call and change the "get" to "post" in the routes file.
resources :users do
member do
post :activate
end
end
Related
I want the users#edit action to always be displayed as /settings.
In my routes I have
get "settings" => "users#edit", as: :settings
Any link to settings is like this
<%= link_to "Settings", settings_path %>
But when I visit example.com/username/edit, it doesn't redirect.
How can I redirect this to settings? And is this a bad practice?
I think you meant to do this instead
get '/username/edit', to: redirect('/settings')
the one you did above is trying to have that url use a method called
edit in users_controller with alias of settings to be used as settings_path in your link somewhere
It is always helpful to look at Rails API for these kinds of questions
Ref: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/routing.html#redirection
By defining a new route settings you are telling Rails to route all GET requests that come to /settings to the users_controller's edit method. This does not mean that all requests that use that controller should redirect to another route - here you have just defined two separate routes that use the same controller method.
If you don't want to use user/edit ever, then I suggest you remove the route. If you currently have something like
# config/routes.rb
resources :users
Simply change it to
# config/routes.rb
resources :users, except: [:edit]
And keep using your settings_path helper.
Hi I'd like to accomplish having a URL that's
users/edit
instead of the current
users/7/edit
I have my own auth system built upon omniauth. Thus I store their user_id in a session. How would I go about accomplishing this task?
Assuming that you use current_user, even if you are using something else just replace current_user with your method, I am using current_user here, follow these steps,
Create an action, I would name it edit_user in your users controller
def edit_user
#user = current_user # or User.find(session[:user_id])
end
Add routes to routes.rb
get "/users/edit" => "users#edit_user"
You are done, you can use the above route anywhere in the application, you can also name the route if needed.
OR, if you don't want to define a new action and want to use the existing edit action, do this
Remove routes for edit from the default resources routes and then manually define it. In this way, you can use the existing edit action
resources :users, except: [:edit]
get "/users/edit" => "users#edit"
Hope this helped!
I want to pass a parameter to the index action, but the I'm only getting the show action.
routes.rb:
Test1::Application.routes.draw do
resources :blog
end
blog_controller.rb:
def show
# code
end
def index
# code
end
View url that send to show action instead to index action:
My link
What should I add in routes file or in view?
Output of my routes:
$ rake routes
blog GET /blog(.:format) {:action=>"index", :controller=>"blog"}
blog GET /blog/:id(.:format) {:action=>"show", :controller=>"blog"}
The command line will show you routes you can use with rake routes
The route you want is blogs_path and you can add a parameter on to that, e.g. blogs_path(other_item => :value).
Exactly how will depend on whether you are try to use it in a controller, another view, etc.
For the view have: <%= link_to 'My Link', blogs_path(:other_item => value) %>
It sounds like you want 2 routes:
/blogs/:other_param
/blogs/:id
But, for as smart as Rails is, it can't figure out whether the param is meant to be treated as an other_param or as an id.
So the simplest solution is to add this route to the resources defaults like so:
resources :blogs
get "/blogs/other_param/:other_param", to: "blogs#index", as: "other_param_blogs"
That way Rails knows that if you're going to /blogs/other_param/current, then it will treat current as the :other_param.
Use below code to pass parameter:
My link
or
<%= link_to "My link", blog_path(name: "test") %>
above code will redirect to index action with name as key and test as parameter,
Users can be edited from a normal resourceful URI like:
/users/1/edit
The issue is that in my application, the edit user page is the home page or root route.
# routes.rb
root :to => "users#edit"
So, I tried to set #user to the current user in the absence of params[:id].
# app/controllers/users_controller.rb
def edit
#user = (params[:id]) ? User.find_by_id(params[:id]) : #current_user
end
Unfortunately, I'm having trouble getting the form to point properly.
# app/views/shared/_manage_users.rb
<%= form_tag follow_user_path, :id => 'update-following-form' %>
I'm getting:
No route matches {:action=>"follow", :controller=>"users"}
follow is a member route of the user resource and has a corresponding controller method. If I access the page via the URI at the top of this question, /users/1/edit, everything works fine and no error is thrown.
I'm not sure whether I'm going about this completely the wrong way or if I'm just not using the right form helper or something silly. How can I fix this issue, or what steps can I follow to debug it?
A member route expects the member to be passed as an argument. You route is expecting a User, like so:
follow_user_path(#user)
in your routes do this
resource :user
instead of
resources :users
now the id param is notin the url. you just need to ensure the user is logged in
I think you need to actually define follow_user in your routes.rb.
Example:
post "user/follow" => "users#follow", :as => :follow_user
Using Ruby on Rails 3's new routing system, is it possible to change the default :id parameter
resources :users, :key => :username
come out with the following routes
/users/new
/users/:username
/users/:username/edit
...etc
I'm asking because although the above example is simple, it would be really helpful to do in a current project I'm working on.
Is it possible to change this parameter, and if not, is there a particular reason as to why not?
In your route you can use
resources :user, param: :username
If I understand you correctly, what you want is to have the username instead of id in your url, right?
You can do that by overriding the to_param method in your model. You can get more information here.
For Ruby on Rails 4.1.4 (and possibly earlier versions) you need to do what both j.. and Ujjwal suggested:
1) In config/routes.rb, add:
resources :user, param: :username
2) In app/models/user.rb, add:
def to_param
username
end
In you only do #1 then all your routes will be correct, as can be seen from rake routes:
$ rake routes
Prefix Verb URI Pattern Controller#Action
user_index GET /user(.:format) user#index
POST /user(.:format) user#create
new_user GET /user/new(.:format) user#new
edit_user GET /user/:username/edit(.:format) user#edit
user GET /user/:username(.:format) user#show
PATCH /user/:username(.:format) user#update
PUT /user/:username(.:format) user#update
DELETE /user/:username(.:format) user#destroy
However the helper methods that construct a url based on a User instance will still include the id in the url, e.g. /user/1. To get the username in the constructed urls, you need to override to_param as in #2.
Although the answer has been accepted by the asker, but there is a simple approach to do this. Write this code in your controller.
authorize_resource :find_by => :username
and in your view, where you want to show the link, write this code.
<%= link_to "Username", user_path(u.username) %>
You don't need any other changes in your routes or controller.
UPDATE: This will only work if you are using CanCan gem.
Pass the user name as the input to the path helpers.
In your view code:
user_path(u.username) #/users/john
In your controller treat the id received as username:
def show
user = User.find_by_username!(params[:id])
...
end