I am using this named_scope to search for products that have a description matching any word the user inputs.
E.g., Product.description_like_any("choc pret")
Will return products with names like
"Chocolate Bar"
"Chocolate Covered Pretzels"
"Miniature Chocolate Ponies"
Here's the named_scope I've written (which works)
named_scope :description_like_any, (lambda do |query|
return {} unless query
conditions = []
values = []
for q in query.split(/\s+/)
conditions << "(`products`.description LIKE ?)"
values << "%#{q}%"
end
{ :conditions => [conditions.join(' AND '), *values] }
end)
Is there a better way to write this? Perhaps I'm missing a Rubyism/Railism or two?
Solution
Using scope_procedure in conjunction with Searchlogic, this can be done in an even easier way. Note, the solution before even leverages Searchlogic's _or_ syntax for connecting two scopes together. The :keywords scope_procedure finds products matching product.description, or product.vendor.name; All with one text field!
Model
# app/models/product.rb
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
scope_procedure :keywords, lambda |query|
description_like_any_or_vendor_name_like_any(query.split(/\s+/))
end
end
Controller
# app/controllers/products_controller.rb
class ProductsController < ApplicationController
def index
#search = Product.search(params[:search])
#products = #search.all
end
end
Views
# app/views/products/index.html.erb
<% form_for #search do |f| %>
<%= f.label :keywords, "Quick Search" %>
<%= f.input :keywords %>
<%= f.submit, "Go" %>
<% end %>
The most Railsy thing to do is to not write this yourself. :-) Use the excellent Searchlogic gem which will create the description_like_any scope for you.
Edit: If you want your user to be able to enter search terms in a free text field like this, you can define your own scope:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
# ...
scope_procedure :description_like_any_term, lambda { |terms|
name_like_any(terms.split(/\s+/))
}
# ...
end
Related
here is my code:
Perk not save on multiple select,when multiple true/false. perk save and habtm working.
class Perk < ActiveRecord::Base
has_and_belongs_to_many :companies
end
class Company < ActiveRecord::Base
has_and_belongs_to_many :perks
end
view perk/new.html.erb
<%= select_tag "company_id", options_from_collection_for_select(Company.all, 'id', 'name',#perk.companies.map{ |j| j.id }), :multiple => true %>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
Controller's code:
def new
#perk = Perk.new
respond_with(#perk)
end
def create
#perk = Perk.new(perk_params)
#companies = Company.where(:id => params[:company_id])
#perk << #companies
respond_with(#perk)
end
Your select_tag should return an array of company_ids:
<%= select_tag "company_ids[]", options_from_collection_for_select(Company.all, 'id', 'name',#perk.companies.map{ |j| j.id }), :multiple => true %>
http://apidock.com/rails/ActionView/Helpers/FormTagHelper/select_tag#691-sending-an-array-of-multiple-options
Then, in your controller, reference the company_ids param:
#companies = Company.where(:id => params[:company_ids])
(I assume that you've intentionally left out the #perk.save call in your create action... Otherwise, that should be included as well. Model.new doesn't store the record.)
It sounds like you may not have included company_id in the perk_params method in your controller. Rails four uses strong pramas this means you need to state the params you are allowing to be set.However it is difficult to say for sure without seeing more of the code.
In your controller you should see a method like this (there may be more options that just :name):
def perk_params
params.require(:perk).permit(:name)
end
You should try adding :company_id to it so it looks something like this:
def perk_params
params.require(:perk).permit(:name, :company_id)
end
if there are other params int your method leave them in and just added :company_id
EDIT to original answer
The above will only work on a one-to-many or one-to-one because you are using has_and_belongs_to_many you will need to add companies: [] to the end of your params list like this
def perk_params
params.require(:perk).permit(:name, companies: [] )
end
or like this
def perk_params
params.require(:perk).permit(:name, companies_ids: [] )
end
See these links for more details:
http://edgeapi.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionController/StrongParameters.html
http://edgeguides.rubyonrails.org/action_controller_overview.html#strong-parameters
I am using several dropdowns to create a search and they are submitting '' if the user doesn't select one. I need a catchall, something like * in SQL as the default value. ie if I have 5 brands in a dropdown, I want the default query to be all 5 brands. Something like Brand.where(brand: ALL). Thanks in advance.
<%= select_tag(:brand, options_for_select(["Brand 1","Brand 2","Brand 3","Brand 4","Other"].map{ |num| [num,num] }),id: 'brand', prompt: 'Brand', class: "table") %>
How about something like:
product.rb
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :by_brand, -> (brand) { where brand: brand }
# put more scopes for the other drop-down boxes
end
product_controller.rb
class ProductsController < ApplicationController
def search
#products = Product.all
#products = #products.by_brand(params[:brand]) unless params[:brand].blank?
# more filtering here
end
end
You probably want include_blank and a prompt in your selects.
select_tag(..., include_blank: true, prompt: 'All')
Now the first entry in the dropdown will have a blank value, and display "All" for its label.
You'll then need to just make sure you don't use that criteria when you query, something like this (you didn't post any code, so I don't know your model):
class MyController ...
def show
#items = Item.all
#items = #items.where(brand: params[:brand]) if params[:brand].present?
#items = #items.where(size: params[:size]) if params[:size].present?
#items = #items.where(year: params[:year]) if params[:year].present?
#items = #items.where(color: params[:color]) if params[:color].present?
end
end
For example in my Car model i have such fields:
color, price, year
and in form partial i generate form with all this fields. But how to code such logic:
user could enter color and year and i must find with this conditions, user could enter just year or all fields in same time...
And how to write where condition? I could write something like:
if params[:color].present?
car = Car.where(color: params[:color])
end
if params[:color].present? && params[:year].present?
car = Car.where(color: params[:color], year: params[:year])
end
and so over....
But this is very ugly solution, i'm new to rails, and want to know: how is better to solve my problem?
Check out the has_scope gem: https://github.com/plataformatec/has_scope
It really simplifies a lot of this:
class Graduation < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :featured, -> { where(:featured => true) }
scope :by_degree, -> degree { where(:degree => degree) }
scope :by_period, -> started_at, ended_at { where("started_at = ? AND ended_at = ?", started_at, ended_at) }
end
class GraduationsController < ApplicationController
has_scope :featured, :type => :boolean
has_scope :by_degree
has_scope :by_period, :using => [:started_at, :ended_at], :type => :hash
def index
#graduations = apply_scopes(Graduation).all
end
end
Thats it from the controller side
I would turn those into scopes on your Car model:
scope :by_color, lambda { |color| where(:color => color)}
scope :by_year, lambda { |year| where(:year => year)}
and in your controller you would just conditionally chain them like this:
def index
#cars = Car.all
#cars = #cars.by_color(params[:color]) if params[:color].present?
#cars = #cars.by_year(params[:year]) if params[:year].present?
end
user_params = [:color, :year, :price]
cars = self
user_params.each do |p|
cars = cars.where(p: params[p]) if params[p].present?
end
The typical (naive, but simple) way I would do this is with a generic search method in my model, eg.
class Car < ActiveRecord::Base
# Just pass params directly in
def self.search(params)
# By default we return all cars
cars = all
if params[:color].present?
cars = cars.where(color: params[:color])
end
if params[:price1].present? && params[:price2].present?
cars = cars.where('price between ? and ?', params[:price1], params[:price2])
end
# insert more fields here
cars
end
end
You can easily keep chaining wheres onto the query like this, and Rails will just AND them all together in the SQL. Then you can just call it with Car.search(params).
I think you could use params.permit
my_where_params = params.permit(:color, :price, :year).select {|k,v| v.present?}
car = Car.where(my_where_params)
EDIT: I think this only works in rails 4, not sure what version you're using.
EDIT #2 excerpt from site I linked to:
Using permit won't mind if the permitted attribute is missing
params = ActionController::Parameters.new(username: "john", password: "secret")
params.permit(:username, :password, :foobar)
# => { "username"=>"john", "password"=>"secret"}
as you can see, foobar isn't inside the new hash.
EDIT #3 added select block to where_params as it was pointed out in the comments that empty form fields would trigger an empty element to be created in the params hash.
So I am trying to implement multiple autocomplete using this gem and simple_form and am getting an error.
I tried this:
<%= f.input_field :neighborhood_id, collection: Neighborhood.order(:name), :url => autocomplete_neighborhood_name_searches_path, :as => :autocomplete, 'data-delimiter' => ',', :multiple => true, :class => "span8" %>
This is the error I get:
undefined method `to_i' for ["Alley Park, Madison"]:Array
In my params, it is sending this in neighborhood_id:
"search"=>{"neighborhood_id"=>["Alley Park, Madison"],
So it isn't even using the IDs for those values.
Does anyone have any ideas?
Edit 1:
In response to #jvnill's question, I am not explicitly doing anything with params[:search] in the controller. A search creates a new record, and is searching listings.
In my Searches Controller, create action, I am simply doing this:
#search = Search.create!(params[:search])
Then my search.rb (i.e. search model) has this:
def listings
#listings ||= find_listings
end
private
def find_listings
key = "%#{keywords}%"
listings = Listing.order(:headline)
listings = listings.includes(:neighborhood).where("listings.headline like ? or neighborhoods.name like ?", key, key) if keywords.present?
listings = listings.where(neighborhood_id: neighborhood_id) if neighborhood_id.present?
#truncated for brevity
listings
end
First of all, this would be easier if the form is returning the ids instead of the name of the neighborhood. I haven't used the gem yet so I'm not familiar how it works. Reading on the readme says that it will return ids but i don't know why you're only getting names. I'm sure once you figure out how to return the ids, you'll be able to change the code below to suit that.
You need to create a join table between a neighborhood and a search. Let's call that search_neighborhoods.
rails g model search_neighborhood neighborhood_id:integer search_id:integer
# dont forget to add indexes in the migration
After that, you'd want to setup your models.
# search.rb
has_many :search_neighborhoods
has_many :neighborhoods, through: :search_neighborhoods
# search_neighborhood.rb
belongs_to :search
belongs_to :neighborhood
# neighborhood.rb
has_many :search_neighborhoods
has_many :searches, through: :search_neighborhoods
Now that we've setup the associations, we need to setup the setters and the attributes
# search.rb
attr_accessible :neighborhood_names
# this will return a list of neighborhood names which is usefull with prepopulating
def neighborhood_names
neighborhoods.map(&:name).join(',')
end
# we will use this to find the ids of the neighborhoods given their names
# this will be called when you call create!
def neighborhood_names=(names)
names.split(',').each do |name|
next if name.blank?
if neighborhood = Neighborhood.find_by_name(name)
search_neighborhoods.build neighborhood_id: neighborhood.id
end
end
end
# view
# you need to change your autocomplete to use the getter method
<%= f.input :neighborhood_names, url: autocomplete_neighborhood_name_searches_path, as: :autocomplete, input_html: { data: { delimiter: ',', multiple: true, class: "span8" } %>
last but not the least is to update find_listings
def find_listings
key = "%#{keywords}%"
listings = Listing.order(:headline).includes(:neighborhood)
if keywords.present?
listings = listings.where("listings.headline LIKE :key OR neighborhoods.name LIKE :key", { key: "#{keywords}")
end
if neighborhoods.exists?
listings = listings.where(neighborhood_id: neighborhood_ids)
end
listings
end
And that's it :)
UPDATE: using f.input_field
# view
<%= f.input_field :neighborhood_names, url: autocomplete_neighborhood_name_searches_path, as: :autocomplete, data: { delimiter: ',' }, multiple: true, class: "span8" %>
# model
# we need to put [0] because it returns an array with a single element containing
# the string of comma separated neighborhoods
def neighborhood_names=(names)
names[0].split(',').each do |name|
next if name.blank?
if neighborhood = Neighborhood.find_by_name(name)
search_neighborhoods.build neighborhood_id: neighborhood.id
end
end
end
Your problem is how you're collecting values from the neighborhood Model
Neighborhood.order(:name)
will return an array of names, you need to also collect the id, but just display the names
use collect and pass a block, I beleive this might owrk for you
Neighborhood.collect {|n| [n.name, n.id]}
Declare a scope on the Neighborhood class to order it by name if you like to get theat functionality back, as that behavior also belongs in the model anyhow.
edit>
To add a scope/class method to neighborhood model, you'd typically do soemthing like this
scope :desc, where("name DESC")
Than you can write something like:
Neighborhood.desc.all
which will return an array, thus allowing the .collect but there are other way to get those name and id attributes recognized by the select option.
I was hoping someone would spot why this wouldn't work.
I am getting an error thats being called because the attributes I specify with Factory_Girl are not being applied to the stub before validation.
The Error:
undefined method `downcase' for #<Category:0x1056f2f60>
RSpec2
it "should vote up" do
#mock_vote = Factory.create(:vote)
Vote.stub(:get_vote).and_return(#mock_vote)
get :vote_up, :id => "1"
end
Factories
Factory.define :vote, :class => Vote do |v|
v.user_id "1"
v.association :post
end
Factory.define :post, :class => Post do |p|
p.category "spirituality"
p.name "sleezy snail potluck"
p.association :category
end
Factory.define :category, :class => Category do |c|
c.name "spirituality"
c.id "37"
end
Post.rb - Model
before_save :prepare_posts
validate :category?
def prepare_posts
self.update_attribute("category", self.category.downcase)
if self.url?
self.url = "http://" + self.url unless self.url.match /^(https?|ftp):\/\//
end
end
def category?
unless Category.exists?(:name => self.category.downcase)
errors.add(:category, "There's no categories with that name.")
end
return true
end
Also, feel free to nitpick any blatantly gross looking code. :D
Thanks!!
You have a category attribute, which appears to be a string, but you also seem to have a category association which automatically creates, among other things, an attribute on Post called category, probably overwriting your category attribute. Hence, the Category class has no downcase method, because it's not a String.
Rename your category attribute to something like category_name, but really you shouldn't have that attribute at all.
Maybe where you're calling self.category.downcase you meant self.category.name.downcase?