I want simple thing. Translate routes with I18n like this
get I18n.t('routes.login') => "devise/sessions#new", :as => :new_user_session
I made file initilizers/locale.rb with
I18n.default_locale = :cz
It works perfectly when i run 'rake routes', but when i run server it ignore default locale and throw 'translation missing message'
Any suggestion what is happening and why ?
I believe, that normally routes are loaded once, even before locale are set, so you simply can't use the logic you have here. You need more advanced stuff to get it to work. Take a look at i18n_routing: http://github.com/kwi/i18n_routing
Related
How do I rewrite this old route Rails 1.2.6 to Rails 3? :
# Allow downloading Web Service WSDL as a file with an extension
# instead of a file named 'wsdl'
map.connect ':controller/service.wsdl', :action => 'wsdl'
I canĀ“t see how I should use match route etc.
I have used:
match ':controller/service.wsdl', :action => 'wsdl'
But I dont think it is working correct
Try this:
match '/controller/service.wsdl' => 'controller#service.wsdl', :as => :wsdl
I'm guessing that your controller is not named controller. If it is, I'd rename it and change the above route as well.
I haven't found a good solution to converting Rails 2 parameterized :controller and :action generic routes to the more explicit Rails 3+ format. What I've had to do is go through every permutation in my app and add an explicit route for everything I needed to support. For example, in your case, if you had 3 controllers that supported the wsdl action, I'd add a new route for each using either match or get.
Here's what it might look like, assuming you had a foo_controller, bar_controller, and a blah_controller that all support the wsdl action:
get '/foo/service.wsdl' :to => 'foo#wsdl'
get '/bar/service.wsdl' :to => 'bar#wsdl'
get '/blah/service.wsdl' :to => 'blah#wsdl'
This gets even more fun when you need to support every action on a controller when they use :action.
If anyone has a better method, I'm open (and eager) to hear of a better way.
I would like to do something to this effect, I believe:
map.connect 'show/:company_name/:id',
:controller => 'companies',
:action => 'show'
Basically, each time the show action is called, I would like it to take the company_name param and place it into the url as such (show/:company_name/:id)
However, it seems I am using old (rails 2.x routing api) and cannot use map.connect without getting an error. How can I upgrade this?
Is there some way to do this with "match"?
Thanks!
===================
This is the error I see when I try to use map.connect:
undefined local variable or method `map' for #<ActionDispatch::Routing::Mapper:0x103757458>
I think your routes lack a "/" symbol in the first line.
Try this:
match '/show/:company_name/:id' => 'companies#show'
You can check your routes path with command rake routes.
--
Besides, the show action is the default RESTful method in Rails. I'll suggest you change a equivalent word, and reserve "show" action for future or other situation.
In Rails convention, you can write resources :companies, and the path will be /companies/:id using show action.
Some adjustment, in app/models/company.rb
def to_param
self.name
end
So your url will look like http://yourdoamin.com/companies/37signals.
In app/controllers/companies_controller.rb
#company = Company.find_by_name(params[:id])
If I'm understanding your goal, try
match 'companies/show/:company_name/:id' => 'companies#show'
I have just setup Sinatra v1.1.0 inside my rails (v3.0.1) app. But I can't invoke any routes that are more than 1 level deep, meaning this works - http://localhost/customer/3,
but this one does not work - http://localhost/customer/3/edit and I get a "Routing Error"
Here's the Sinatra object
class CustomerApp < Sinatra::Base
# this works
get "/customer/:id" do
"Hello Customer"
end
# this does NOT work
get "/customer/:id/edit" do
"Hello Customer"
end
end
This is what I have in my rails routes.rb file -
match '/customer/(:string)' => CustomerApp
I am guessing I need some magic in the routes file? What could be the problem?
In your routes file, you can specify the mapping this way:
mount CustomerApp, :at => '/customer'
Now, inside your sinatra application, you can specify your routes without the /customer part.
Dont't forget to require your sinatra application somewhere (you can do it directly in the route file)
You need to add an additional route to match the different URL:
match '/customer/(:string)/edit' => CustomerApp
Say I have a router helper that I want more info on, like blogs_path, how do I find out the map statements behind that in console.
I tried generate and recognize and I got unrecognized method error, even after I did require 'config/routes.rb'
There is a good summary with examples at Zobie's Blog showing how to manually check URL-to-controller/action mapping and the converse. For example, start with
r = Rails.application.routes
to access the routes object (Zobie's page, a couple years old, says to use ActionController::Routing::Routes, but that's now deprecated in favor of Rails.application.routes). You can then check the routing based on a URL:
>> r.recognize_path "/station/index/42.html"
=> {:controller=>"station", :action=>"index", :format=>"html", :id=>"42"}
and see what URL is generated for a given controller/action/parameters combination:
>> r.generate :controller => :station, :action=> :index, :id=>42
=> /station/index/42
Thanks, Zobie!
In the console of a Rails 3.2 app:
# include routing and URL helpers
include ActionDispatch::Routing
include Rails.application.routes.url_helpers
# use routes normally
users_path #=> "/users"
Basically(if I understood your question right) it boils down to including the UrlWriter Module:
include ActionController::UrlWriter
root_path
=> "/"
Or you can prepend app to the calls in the console e.g.:
ruby-1.9.2-p136 :002 > app.root_path
=> "/"
(This is all Rails v. 3.0.3)
running the routes command from your project directory will display your routing:
rake routes
is this what you had in mind?
If you are seeing errors like
ActionController::RoutingError: No route matches
Where it should be working, you may be using a rails gem or engine that does something like Spree does where it prepends routes, you may need to do something else to view routes in console.
In spree's case, this is in the routes file
Spree::Core::Engine.routes.prepend do
...
end
And to work like #mike-blythe suggests, you would then do this before generate or recognize_path.
r = Spree::Core::Engine.routes
Im having a little trouble setting up routes.
I have a 'users' controller/model/views set up restfully
so users is set up to be a resource in my routes.
I want to change that to be 'usuarios' instead cause the app will be made for spanish speaking region... the reason the user model is in english is cause I was following the authlogic set up and wasnt sure if naming the model usuario instead would create trouble.. so basically this is what I have in mr routes.rb to get this functionality done.
map.resources :usuarios,:controller=>"users", :path_names => {:edit => 'editar' }
the problem is that when I try to register a new user I get this error
ActionController::MethodNotAllowed
Only get, put, and delete requests are allowed.
this happens after I have filled out my register form and clicked on submit...
Have you tried using the 'as' option to change how the url looks without modifying the routes?
This example is from the documentation:
# products_path == '/productos'
map.resources :products, :as => 'productos' do |product|
# product_reviews_path(product) == '/productos/1234/comentarios'
product.resources :product_reviews, :as => 'comentarios'
end
You can try rake routes | grep usuarios from a terminal window (cd to the project root first) to make sure that the proper named routes are setup properly. You can cross reference that with the form tag you are using to make sure that the action for the form is correct.