effective_datatables 1.0.0
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- checksums.yaml +7 -0
- data/MIT-LICENSE +20 -0
- data/README.md +581 -0
- data/Rakefile +23 -0
- data/app/assets/images/effective_datatables/copy_csv_xls_pdf.swf +0 -0
- data/app/assets/javascripts/effective_datatables.bootstrap2.js +11 -0
- data/app/assets/javascripts/effective_datatables.js +12 -0
- data/app/assets/javascripts/effective_datatables/initialize.js.coffee +65 -0
- data/app/assets/javascripts/vendor/jquery.dataTables.columnFilter.js +829 -0
- data/app/assets/stylesheets/effective_datatables.bootstrap2.css.scss +8 -0
- data/app/assets/stylesheets/effective_datatables.css.scss +8 -0
- data/app/assets/stylesheets/effective_datatables/_overrides.scss +72 -0
- data/app/controllers/effective/datatables_controller.rb +36 -0
- data/app/helpers/effective_datatables_helper.rb +74 -0
- data/app/models/effective/access_denied.rb +17 -0
- data/app/models/effective/active_record_datatable_tool.rb +87 -0
- data/app/models/effective/array_datatable_tool.rb +66 -0
- data/app/models/effective/datatable.rb +352 -0
- data/app/views/effective/datatables/_datatable.html.haml +11 -0
- data/app/views/effective/datatables/_spacer_template.html +1 -0
- data/config/routes.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/effective_datatables.rb +32 -0
- data/lib/effective_datatables/engine.rb +20 -0
- data/lib/effective_datatables/version.rb +3 -0
- data/lib/generators/effective_datatables/install_generator.rb +17 -0
- data/lib/generators/templates/README +1 -0
- data/lib/generators/templates/effective_datatables.rb +23 -0
- data/lib/tasks/effective_datatables_tasks.rake +17 -0
- data/spec/dummy/README.rdoc +261 -0
- data/spec/dummy/Rakefile +7 -0
- data/spec/dummy/app/assets/javascripts/application.js +15 -0
- data/spec/dummy/app/assets/stylesheets/application.css +13 -0
- data/spec/dummy/app/controllers/application_controller.rb +3 -0
- data/spec/dummy/app/helpers/application_helper.rb +2 -0
- data/spec/dummy/app/views/layouts/application.html.erb +14 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config.ru +4 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/application.rb +59 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/boot.rb +10 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/database.yml +25 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/environment.rb +5 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/environments/development.rb +37 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/environments/production.rb +67 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/environments/test.rb +37 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/backtrace_silencers.rb +7 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/inflections.rb +15 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/mime_types.rb +5 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/secret_token.rb +7 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/session_store.rb +8 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/wrap_parameters.rb +14 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/locales/en.yml +5 -0
- data/spec/dummy/config/routes.rb +58 -0
- data/spec/dummy/db/development.sqlite3 +0 -0
- data/spec/dummy/db/schema.rb +16 -0
- data/spec/dummy/db/test.sqlite3 +0 -0
- data/spec/dummy/log/development.log +17 -0
- data/spec/dummy/log/test.log +1 -0
- data/spec/dummy/public/404.html +26 -0
- data/spec/dummy/public/422.html +26 -0
- data/spec/dummy/public/500.html +25 -0
- data/spec/dummy/public/favicon.ico +0 -0
- data/spec/dummy/script/rails +6 -0
- data/spec/effective_datatables_spec.rb +7 -0
- data/spec/spec_helper.rb +34 -0
- data/spec/support/factories.rb +1 -0
- metadata +217 -0
checksums.yaml
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data/MIT-LICENSE
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Copyright 2014 Code and Effect Inc.
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
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a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
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"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
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without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
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distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
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permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
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the following conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
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LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
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OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
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WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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data/README.md
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# Effective DataTables
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Uniquely powerful server-side searching, sorting and filtering of any ActiveRecord or Array collection as well as post-rendered content displayed as a frontend jQuery Datatable.
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Use a simple DSL in just one ruby file to implement all features
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Search raw database tables and ruby post-rendered results at the same time
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Packages the jQuery DataTables assets for use in a Rails 3.2.x & Rails 4.x application using Twitter Bootstrap 2 or 3
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## Getting Started
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```ruby
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gem 'effective_datatables'
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```
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Run the bundle command to install it:
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```console
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bundle install
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```
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Install the configuration file:
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```console
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rails generate effective_datatables:install
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```
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The generator will install an initializer which describes all configuration options.
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Require the javascript on the asset pipeline by adding the following to your application.js:
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```ruby
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# For use with Bootstrap3 (which is not included in this gem):
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//= require effective_datatables
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# For use with Bootstrap2 (which is not includled in this gem):
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//= require effective_datatables.bootstrap2
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```
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Require the stylesheet on the asset pipeline by adding the following to your application.css:
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```ruby
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# For use with Bootstrap3 (which is not included in this gem):
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*= require effective_datatables
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# For use with Bootstrap2 (which is not not included in this gem):
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*= require effective_datatables.bootstrap2
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```
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## Usage
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We create a model, initialize it within our controller, then render it from a view
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### The Model
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Start by creating a model in the `/app/models/effective/datatables/` directory.
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Any `Effective::Datatable` models that exist in this directory will be automatically detected and 'just work'.
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Below is a very simple example file, which we will expand upon later.
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This model exists at `/app/models/effective/datatables/posts.rb`:
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```ruby
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module Effective
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module Datatables
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class Posts < Effective::Datatable
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table_column :id
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table_column :user # if Post belongs_to :user
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table_column :title
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table_column :created_at
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def collection
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Post.all
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end
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end
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end
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end
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```
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### The Controller
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We're going to display this DataTable on the posts#index action
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```ruby
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class PostsController < ApplicationController
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def index
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@datatable = Effective::Datatables::Posts.new()
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end
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end
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```
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### The View
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Here we just render the datatable:
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```erb
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<h1>All Posts</h1>
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<% if @datatable.collection.length == 0 %>
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<p>There are no posts.</p>
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<% else %>
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<%= render_datatable(@datatable) %>
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<% end %>
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```
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## How It Works
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When the jQuery DataTable is first initialized on the front-end, it makes an AJAX request back to the server asking for data.
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The effective_datatables gem intercepts this request and returns the appropriate results.
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Whenever a search, sort, filter or pagination is initiated on the front end, that request is interpretted by the server and the appropriate results returned.
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Due to the unique search/filter ability of this gem, a mix of raw database tables and processed results may be worked with at the same time.
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### Effective::Datatable Model & DSL
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Once your controller and view are set up to render a Datatable, the model is the central point to configure all behaviour.
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This single model file contains just 1 required method and responds to only 3 DSL commands.
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Each `Effective::Datatable` model must be defined in the `/app/models/effective/datatables/` directory.
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For example: `/app/models/effective/datatables/posts.rb`:
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```ruby
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module Effective
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module Datatables
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class Posts < Effective::Datatable
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default_order :created_at, :desc
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table_column :id, :visible => false
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table_column :created_at, :width => '25%' do |post|
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post.created_at.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
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end
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table_column :updated_at, :proc => Proc.new { |post| nicetime(post.updated_at) } # just a standard helper as defined in helpers/application_helper.rb
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table_column :user
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table_column :post_category_id, :filter => {:type => :select, :values => Proc.new { PostCategory.all } } do |post|
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post.post_category.name.titleize
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end
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array_column :comments do |post|
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content_tag(:ul) do
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post.comments.where(:archived => false).map do |comment|
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content_tag(:li, comment.title)
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end.join('').html_safe
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end
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end
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table_column :title, :label => 'Post Title'
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table_column :actions, :sortable => false, :filter => false, :partial => '/posts/actions'
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def collection
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Post.where(:archived => false).includes(:post_category)
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end
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end
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end
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end
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```
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### The collection
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A required method `def collection` must be defined to return the base ActiveRecord collection.
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It can be as simple or as complex as you'd like:
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```ruby
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def collection
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Posts.all
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end
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```
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or (complex example):
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```ruby
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def collection
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User.unscoped.uniq
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.joins('LEFT JOIN customers ON customers.user_id = users.id')
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.select('users.*')
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.select('customers.stripe_customer_id AS stripe_customer_id')
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.includes(:addresses)
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end
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```
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## table_column
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This is the main DSL method that you will interact with.
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table_column defines a 1:1 mapping between a SQL database table column and a frontend jQuery Datatables table column. It creates a column.
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Options may be passed to specify the display, search, sort and filter behaviour for that column.
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When the given name of the table_column matches an ActiveRecord attribute, the options are set intelligently based on the underlying datatype.
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```ruby
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# The name of the table column as per the Database
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# This column is detected as an Integer, therefore it is :type => :integer
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# Any SQL used to search this field will take the form of "id = ?"
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table_column :id
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# As per our 'complex' example above, using the .select('customers.stripe_customer_id AS stripe_customer_id') syntax to create a faux database table
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# This column is detected as a String, therefore it is :type => :string
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# Any SQL used to search this field will take the form of "customers.stripe_customer_id ILIKE %?%"
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table_column :stripe_customer_id, :column => 'customers.stripe_customer_id'
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# The name of the table column as per the Database
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# This column is detected as a DateTime, therefore it is :type => :datetime
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# Any SQL used to search this field will take the form of
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# "to_char(#{column} AT TIME ZONE 'GMT', 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI') ILIKE '%?%'"
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table_column :created_at
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# If the name of the table column matches a belongs_to in our collection's main class
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# This column will be detected as a belongs_to and some predefined filters will be set up
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# So declaring the following
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table_column :user
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# Will have the same behaviour as declaring
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table_column :user_id, :if => Proc.new { attributes[:user_id].blank? }, :filter => {:type => :select, :values => Proc.new { User.all.map { |user| [user.id, user.to_s] }.sort { |x, y| x[1] <=> y[1] } } } do |post|
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post.user.to_s
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end
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```
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All table_columns are `:visible => true`, `:sortable => true` by default.
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### General Options
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The following options control the general behaviour of the column:
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```ruby
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:column => 'users.id' # Set this if you're doing something tricky with the database. Used internally for .order() and .where() clauses
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:type => :string # Derived from the ActiveRecord attribute default datatype. Controls searching behaviour. Valid options include :string, :text, :datetime, :integer, :boolean, :year
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:if => Proc.new { attributes[:user_id].blank? } # Excludes this table_column entirely if false. See "Initialize with attributes" section of this README below
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```
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### Display Options
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The following options control the display behaviour of the column:
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```ruby
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:label => 'Nice Label' # Override the default column header label
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:sortable => true|false # Allow sorting of this column. Otherwise the up/down arrows on the frontend will be disabled.
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:visible => true|false # Hide this column at startup. Column visbility can be changed on the frontend. By default, hidden column filter terms are ignored.
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:width => '100%'|'100px' # Set the width of this column. Can be set on one, all or some of the columns. If using percentages, should never add upto more than 100%
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```
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### Filtering Options
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Setting a filter will create an appropriate text/number/select input in the header row of the column.
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The following options control the filtering behaviour of the column:
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```ruby
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table_column :created_at, :filter => false # Disable filtering on this column entirely
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table_column :created_at, :filter => {...} # Enable filtering with these options
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:filter => {:type => :number}
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:filter => {:type => :text}
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:filter => {:type => :select, :values => ['One', 'Two'], :selected => 'Two'}
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:filter => {:type => :select, :values => [*2010..(Time.zone.now.year+6)]}
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:filter => {:type => :select, :values => Proc.new { PostCategory.all } }
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:filter => {:type => :select, :values => Proc.new { User.all.order(:email).map { |obj| [obj.id, obj.email] } } }
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```
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Some additional, lesser used options include:
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```ruby
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:filter => {:when_hidden => true} # By default a hidden column's search filter will be ignored, unless this is true. Can be used for scoping.
|
279
|
+
:filter => {:fuzzy => true} # Will use an ILIKE/includes rather than = when filtering. Use this for selects.
|
280
|
+
```
|
281
|
+
|
282
|
+
### Rendering Options
|
283
|
+
|
284
|
+
There are a few different ways to render each column's output.
|
285
|
+
|
286
|
+
Any standard view helpers like `link_to` or `simple_format` and any custom helpers available to your views will be available.
|
287
|
+
|
288
|
+
All of the following rendering options can be used interchangeably:
|
289
|
+
|
290
|
+
Block format (really, this is your cleanest option):
|
291
|
+
|
292
|
+
```ruby
|
293
|
+
table_column :created_at do |post|
|
294
|
+
if post.created_at > (Time.zone.now-1.year)
|
295
|
+
link_to('this year', post_path(post))
|
296
|
+
else
|
297
|
+
link_to(post.created_at.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), post_path(post))
|
298
|
+
end
|
299
|
+
end
|
300
|
+
```
|
301
|
+
|
302
|
+
Proc format:
|
303
|
+
|
304
|
+
```ruby
|
305
|
+
table_column :created_at, :proc => Proc.new { |post| link_to(post.created_at, post_path(post)) }
|
306
|
+
```
|
307
|
+
|
308
|
+
Partial format:
|
309
|
+
|
310
|
+
```ruby
|
311
|
+
table_column :actions, :partial => '/posts/actions' # render this partial for each row of the table
|
312
|
+
```
|
313
|
+
|
314
|
+
then in your `/app/views/posts/_actions.html.erb` file:
|
315
|
+
|
316
|
+
```erb
|
317
|
+
<p><%= link_to('View', post_path(post)) %></p>
|
318
|
+
<p><%= link_to('Edit', edit_post_path(post)) %></p>
|
319
|
+
```
|
320
|
+
|
321
|
+
The local object name will either match the database table singular name `post`, the name of the partial `actions`, or `obj` unless overridden with:
|
322
|
+
|
323
|
+
```ruby
|
324
|
+
table_column :actions, :partial => '/posts/actions', :partial_local => 'the_post'
|
325
|
+
```
|
326
|
+
|
327
|
+
There are also a built in helper, `datatables_admin_path?` to considering if the current screen is in the `/admin` namespace:
|
328
|
+
|
329
|
+
```ruby
|
330
|
+
table_column :created_at do |post|
|
331
|
+
if datatables_admin_path?
|
332
|
+
link_to admin_posts_path(post)
|
333
|
+
else
|
334
|
+
link_to posts_path(post)
|
335
|
+
end
|
336
|
+
end
|
337
|
+
```
|
338
|
+
|
339
|
+
The request object is available to the table_column, so you could just as easily call:
|
340
|
+
|
341
|
+
```ruby
|
342
|
+
request.referer.include?('/admin/')
|
343
|
+
```
|
344
|
+
|
345
|
+
|
346
|
+
## table_columns
|
347
|
+
|
348
|
+
Quickly create multiple table_columns all with default options:
|
349
|
+
|
350
|
+
```ruby
|
351
|
+
table_columns :id, :created_at, :updated_at, :category, :title
|
352
|
+
```
|
353
|
+
|
354
|
+
## array_column
|
355
|
+
|
356
|
+
`array_column` accepts the same options as `table_column` and behaves identically on the frontend.
|
357
|
+
|
358
|
+
The difference occurs with sorting and filtering:
|
359
|
+
|
360
|
+
With a `table_column`, the frontend sends some search terms to the server, the raw database table is searched & sorted using standard ActiveRecord .where(), the appropriate rows returned, and then each row is rendered as per the rendering options.
|
361
|
+
|
362
|
+
With an `array_column`, the front end sends some search terms to the server, all rows are returned and rendered, and then the rendered output is searched & sorted.
|
363
|
+
|
364
|
+
This allows the output of an `array_column` to be anything complex that cannot be easily computed from the database.
|
365
|
+
|
366
|
+
When searching & sorting with a mix of table_columns and array_columns, all the table_columns are processed first so the most work is put on the database, the least on rails.
|
367
|
+
|
368
|
+
|
369
|
+
## default_order
|
370
|
+
|
371
|
+
Sort the table by this field and direction on start up
|
372
|
+
|
373
|
+
```ruby
|
374
|
+
default_order :created_at, :asc|:desc
|
375
|
+
```
|
376
|
+
|
377
|
+
## Additional Functionality
|
378
|
+
|
379
|
+
There are a few other ways to customize the behaviour of effective_datatables
|
380
|
+
|
381
|
+
### Customize Filter Behaviour
|
382
|
+
|
383
|
+
This gem does its best to provide "just works" filtering of both raw SQL (table_column) and processed results (array_column) out-of-the-box.
|
384
|
+
|
385
|
+
It's also very easy to override the filter behaviour on a per-column basis.
|
386
|
+
|
387
|
+
Keep in mind, columns that are hidden will not be considered by the filter results unless `:filter => {:when_hidden => true}` is passed to table_column
|
388
|
+
|
389
|
+
For custom filter behaviour, specify a `def search_column` method in the datatables model file:
|
390
|
+
|
391
|
+
```ruby
|
392
|
+
def collection
|
393
|
+
User.unscoped.uniq
|
394
|
+
.joins('LEFT JOIN customers ON customers.user_id = users.id')
|
395
|
+
.select('users.*')
|
396
|
+
.select('customers.stripe_customer_id AS stripe_customer_id')
|
397
|
+
.includes(:addresses)
|
398
|
+
end
|
399
|
+
|
400
|
+
def search_column(collection, table_column, search_term)
|
401
|
+
if table_column[:name] == 'subscription_types'
|
402
|
+
collection.where('subscriptions.stripe_plan_id ILIKE ?', "%#{search_term}%")
|
403
|
+
else
|
404
|
+
super
|
405
|
+
end
|
406
|
+
end
|
407
|
+
```
|
408
|
+
|
409
|
+
### Initialize with attributes
|
410
|
+
|
411
|
+
Any attributes passed to `.new()` will be persisted through the lifecycle of the datatable.
|
412
|
+
|
413
|
+
You can use this to scope the datatable collection or create even more advanced search behaviour.
|
414
|
+
|
415
|
+
In the following example we will hide the User column and scope the collection to a specific user.
|
416
|
+
|
417
|
+
In your controller:
|
418
|
+
|
419
|
+
```ruby
|
420
|
+
class PostsController < ApplicationController
|
421
|
+
def index
|
422
|
+
@datatable = Effective::Datatables::Posts.new(:user_id => current_user.try(:id))
|
423
|
+
end
|
424
|
+
end
|
425
|
+
```
|
426
|
+
|
427
|
+
Scope the query to the passed user in in your collection method:
|
428
|
+
|
429
|
+
```ruby
|
430
|
+
def collection
|
431
|
+
if attributes[:user_id]
|
432
|
+
Post.where(:user_id => attributes[:user_id])
|
433
|
+
else
|
434
|
+
Post.all
|
435
|
+
end
|
436
|
+
end
|
437
|
+
```
|
438
|
+
|
439
|
+
and remove the table_column when a user_id is present:
|
440
|
+
|
441
|
+
```ruby
|
442
|
+
table_column :user_id, :if => Proc.new { attributes[:user_id].blank? } do |post|
|
443
|
+
post.user.email
|
444
|
+
end
|
445
|
+
```
|
446
|
+
|
447
|
+
## Array Backed collection
|
448
|
+
|
449
|
+
Don't want to use ActiveRecord? Not a problem.
|
450
|
+
|
451
|
+
Define your collection as an Array of Arrays, declare only array_columns, and everything works as expected.
|
452
|
+
|
453
|
+
```ruby
|
454
|
+
module Effective
|
455
|
+
module Datatables
|
456
|
+
class ArrayBackedDataTable < Effective::Datatable
|
457
|
+
array_column :id
|
458
|
+
array_column :first_name
|
459
|
+
array_column :last_name
|
460
|
+
array_column :email
|
461
|
+
|
462
|
+
def collection
|
463
|
+
[
|
464
|
+
[1, 'Matthew', 'Riemer', 'matthew@agilestyle.com'],
|
465
|
+
[2, 'Dallas', 'Meidinger', 'dallas@agilestyle.com'],
|
466
|
+
[3, 'Warren', 'Uhrich', 'warren@agilestyle.com'],
|
467
|
+
[4, 'Stephen', 'Brown', 'stephen@agilestyle.com'],
|
468
|
+
[5, 'Dana', 'Janssen', 'dana@agilestyle.com'],
|
469
|
+
[6, 'Ashley', 'Janssen', 'ashley@agilestyle.com'],
|
470
|
+
]
|
471
|
+
end
|
472
|
+
|
473
|
+
end
|
474
|
+
end
|
475
|
+
end
|
476
|
+
```
|
477
|
+
|
478
|
+
## Get access to the raw results
|
479
|
+
|
480
|
+
After all the searching, sorting and rendering of final results is complete, the server sends back an Array of Arrays to the front end jQuery DataTable
|
481
|
+
|
482
|
+
The finalize method provides a hook to process the final collection as an Array of Arrays just before it is convered to JSON.
|
483
|
+
|
484
|
+
This final collection is available after searching, sorting and pagination.
|
485
|
+
|
486
|
+
As you have full control over the table_column presentation, I can't think of any reason you would actually need or want this:
|
487
|
+
|
488
|
+
```ruby
|
489
|
+
def finalize(collection)
|
490
|
+
collection.each do |row|
|
491
|
+
row.each do |column|
|
492
|
+
column.gsub!('horse', 'force') if column.kind_of?(String)
|
493
|
+
end
|
494
|
+
end
|
495
|
+
end
|
496
|
+
```
|
497
|
+
|
498
|
+
## Authorization
|
499
|
+
|
500
|
+
All authorization checks are handled via the config.authorization_method found in the `config/initializers/effective_datatables.rb` file.
|
501
|
+
|
502
|
+
It is intended for flow through to CanCan or Pundit, but neither of those gems are required.
|
503
|
+
|
504
|
+
This method is called by the controller action with the appropriate action and resource
|
505
|
+
|
506
|
+
Action will be `:index`
|
507
|
+
|
508
|
+
The resource will be the collection base class, such as `Post`. This can be overridden:
|
509
|
+
|
510
|
+
```ruby
|
511
|
+
def collection_class
|
512
|
+
NotPost
|
513
|
+
end
|
514
|
+
```
|
515
|
+
|
516
|
+
The authorization method is defined in the initializer file:
|
517
|
+
|
518
|
+
```ruby
|
519
|
+
# As a Proc (with CanCan)
|
520
|
+
config.authorization_method = Proc.new { |controller, action, resource| authorize!(action, resource) }
|
521
|
+
```
|
522
|
+
|
523
|
+
```ruby
|
524
|
+
# As a Custom Method
|
525
|
+
config.authorization_method = :my_authorization_method
|
526
|
+
```
|
527
|
+
|
528
|
+
and then in your application_controller.rb:
|
529
|
+
|
530
|
+
```ruby
|
531
|
+
def my_authorization_method(action, resource)
|
532
|
+
current_user.is?(:admin) || EffectivePunditPolicy.new(current_user, resource).send('#{action}?')
|
533
|
+
end
|
534
|
+
```
|
535
|
+
|
536
|
+
or disabled entirely:
|
537
|
+
|
538
|
+
```ruby
|
539
|
+
config.authorization_method = false
|
540
|
+
```
|
541
|
+
|
542
|
+
If the method or proc returns false (user is not authorized) an `Effective::AccessDenied` exception will be raised
|
543
|
+
|
544
|
+
You can rescue from this exception by adding the following to your application_controller.rb:
|
545
|
+
|
546
|
+
```ruby
|
547
|
+
rescue_from Effective::AccessDenied do |exception|
|
548
|
+
respond_to do |format|
|
549
|
+
format.html { render 'static_pages/access_denied', :status => 403 }
|
550
|
+
format.any { render :text => 'Access Denied', :status => 403 }
|
551
|
+
end
|
552
|
+
end
|
553
|
+
```
|
554
|
+
|
555
|
+
|
556
|
+
## License
|
557
|
+
|
558
|
+
MIT License. Copyright [Code and Effect Inc.](http://www.codeandeffect.com/)
|
559
|
+
|
560
|
+
Code and Effect is the product arm of [AgileStyle](http://www.agilestyle.com/), an Edmonton-based shop that specializes in building custom web applications with Ruby on Rails.
|
561
|
+
|
562
|
+
|
563
|
+
## Testing
|
564
|
+
|
565
|
+
The test suite for this gem is unfortunately not yet complete.
|
566
|
+
|
567
|
+
Run tests by:
|
568
|
+
|
569
|
+
```ruby
|
570
|
+
rake spec
|
571
|
+
```
|
572
|
+
|
573
|
+
## Contributing
|
574
|
+
|
575
|
+
1. Fork it
|
576
|
+
2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
|
577
|
+
3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`)
|
578
|
+
4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
|
579
|
+
5. Bonus points for test coverage
|
580
|
+
6. Create new Pull Request
|
581
|
+
|