instiki/vendor/rails/actionpack/lib/action_view/partials.rb
2007-01-22 07:43:50 -06:00

128 lines
5.6 KiB
Ruby

module ActionView
# There's also a convenience method for rendering sub templates within the current controller that depends on a single object
# (we call this kind of sub templates for partials). It relies on the fact that partials should follow the naming convention of being
# prefixed with an underscore -- as to separate them from regular templates that could be rendered on their own.
#
# In a template for Advertiser#account:
#
# <%= render :partial => "account" %>
#
# This would render "advertiser/_account.rhtml" and pass the instance variable @account in as a local variable +account+ to
# the template for display.
#
# In another template for Advertiser#buy, we could have:
#
# <%= render :partial => "account", :locals => { :account => @buyer } %>
#
# <% for ad in @advertisements %>
# <%= render :partial => "ad", :locals => { :ad => ad } %>
# <% end %>
#
# This would first render "advertiser/_account.rhtml" with @buyer passed in as the local variable +account+, then render
# "advertiser/_ad.rhtml" and pass the local variable +ad+ to the template for display.
#
# == Rendering a collection of partials
#
# The example of partial use describes a familiar pattern where a template needs to iterate over an array and render a sub
# template for each of the elements. This pattern has been implemented as a single method that accepts an array and renders
# a partial by the same name as the elements contained within. So the three-lined example in "Using partials" can be rewritten
# with a single line:
#
# <%= render :partial => "ad", :collection => @advertisements %>
#
# This will render "advertiser/_ad.rhtml" and pass the local variable +ad+ to the template for display. An iteration counter
# will automatically be made available to the template with a name of the form +partial_name_counter+. In the case of the
# example above, the template would be fed +ad_counter+.
#
# NOTE: Due to backwards compatibility concerns, the collection can't be one of hashes. Normally you'd also just keep domain objects,
# like Active Records, in there.
#
# == Rendering shared partials
#
# Two controllers can share a set of partials and render them like this:
#
# <%= render :partial => "advertisement/ad", :locals => { :ad => @advertisement } %>
#
# This will render the partial "advertisement/_ad.rhtml" regardless of which controller this is being called from.
module Partials
# Deprecated, use render :partial
def render_partial(partial_path, local_assigns = nil, deprecated_local_assigns = nil) #:nodoc:
path, partial_name = partial_pieces(partial_path)
object = extracting_object(partial_name, local_assigns, deprecated_local_assigns)
local_assigns = extract_local_assigns(local_assigns, deprecated_local_assigns)
local_assigns = local_assigns ? local_assigns.clone : {}
add_counter_to_local_assigns!(partial_name, local_assigns)
add_object_to_local_assigns!(partial_name, local_assigns, object)
if logger
ActionController::Base.benchmark("Rendered #{path}/_#{partial_name}", Logger::DEBUG, false) do
render("#{path}/_#{partial_name}", local_assigns)
end
else
render("#{path}/_#{partial_name}", local_assigns)
end
end
# Deprecated, use render :partial, :collection
def render_partial_collection(partial_name, collection, partial_spacer_template = nil, local_assigns = nil) #:nodoc:
collection_of_partials = Array.new
counter_name = partial_counter_name(partial_name)
local_assigns = local_assigns ? local_assigns.clone : {}
collection.each_with_index do |element, counter|
local_assigns[counter_name] = counter
collection_of_partials.push(render_partial(partial_name, element, local_assigns))
end
return " " if collection_of_partials.empty?
if partial_spacer_template
spacer_path, spacer_name = partial_pieces(partial_spacer_template)
collection_of_partials.join(render("#{spacer_path}/_#{spacer_name}"))
else
collection_of_partials.join
end
end
alias_method :render_collection_of_partials, :render_partial_collection
private
def partial_pieces(partial_path)
if partial_path.include?('/')
return File.dirname(partial_path), File.basename(partial_path)
else
return controller.class.controller_path, partial_path
end
end
def partial_counter_name(partial_name)
"#{partial_name.split('/').last}_counter".intern
end
def extracting_object(partial_name, local_assigns, deprecated_local_assigns)
if local_assigns.is_a?(Hash) || local_assigns.nil?
controller.instance_variable_get("@#{partial_name}")
else
# deprecated form where object could be passed in as second parameter
local_assigns
end
end
def extract_local_assigns(local_assigns, deprecated_local_assigns)
local_assigns.is_a?(Hash) ? local_assigns : deprecated_local_assigns
end
def add_counter_to_local_assigns!(partial_name, local_assigns)
counter_name = partial_counter_name(partial_name)
local_assigns[counter_name] = 1 unless local_assigns.has_key?(counter_name)
end
def add_object_to_local_assigns!(partial_name, local_assigns, object)
local_assigns[partial_name.intern] ||=
if object.is_a?(ActionView::Base::ObjectWrapper)
object.value
else
object
end || controller.instance_variable_get("@#{partial_name}")
end
end
end