meta-tags 2.0.0 → 2.1.0

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data/.gitignore CHANGED
@@ -2,5 +2,6 @@
2
2
  .DS_Store
3
3
  .bundle
4
4
  Gemfile.lock
5
+ coverage
5
6
  doc
6
7
  pkg
data/.rspec ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
1
+ --color
2
+ --warnings
3
+ --require spec_helper
@@ -1 +1 @@
1
- ruby-2.1.1
1
+ ruby-2.2
@@ -1,27 +1,21 @@
1
1
  rvm:
2
- - ree
3
- - 1.8.7
4
- - 1.9.3
5
2
  - 2.0.0
6
- - 2.1.0
3
+ - 2.1.7
4
+ - 2.2.3
7
5
 
8
6
  env:
9
7
  - "RAILS_VERSION=3.1.0"
10
8
  - "RAILS_VERSION=3.2.0"
11
9
  - "RAILS_VERSION=4.0.0"
12
10
  - "RAILS_VERSION=4.1.0"
11
+ - "RAILS_VERSION=4.2.0"
13
12
 
14
13
  matrix:
15
- exclude:
16
- - rvm: ree
17
- env: "RAILS_VERSION=4.0.0"
18
- - rvm: ree
19
- env: "RAILS_VERSION=4.1.0"
20
- - rvm: 1.8.7
21
- env: "RAILS_VERSION=4.0.0"
22
- - rvm: 1.8.7
23
- env: "RAILS_VERSION=4.1.0"
24
14
 
25
15
  notifications:
26
16
  recipients:
27
17
  - kpumuk@kpumuk.info
18
+
19
+ addons:
20
+ code_climate:
21
+ repo_token: "8792cbc0d1780830ddd3dd7eb1c25f09f386ba8f04449ad830039469406a6ab3"
@@ -1,3 +1,21 @@
1
+ ## 2.1.0 (October 6, 2015)
2
+
3
+ Changes:
4
+
5
+ - Ruby < 2.0 is not longer supported
6
+
7
+ Features:
8
+
9
+ - Added charset meta tag
10
+ - Added ability to configure limits for title, description, keywords
11
+ - Added OpenSearch links support
12
+ - Added icon links support
13
+ - Alternate links can now be generated for RSS or mobile versions
14
+
15
+ Bugfixes
16
+ - Generate `<meta name=""/>` instead of `<meta property=""/>` for custom meta tags
17
+ - Double HTML escaping in meta tags
18
+
1
19
  ## 2.0.0 (April 15, 2014)
2
20
 
3
21
  Features:
data/Gemfile CHANGED
@@ -6,3 +6,8 @@ gemspec
6
6
  if ENV['RAILS_VERSION']
7
7
  gem 'actionpack', "~> #{ENV['RAILS_VERSION']}"
8
8
  end
9
+
10
+ group :test do
11
+ gem 'codeclimate-test-reporter', require: false
12
+ gem 'rspec-html-matchers'
13
+ end
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,8 +1,9 @@
1
1
  # MetaTags: a gem to make your Rails application SEO-friendly
2
2
 
3
- [![Travis-CI build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/kpumuk/meta-tags.png)](http://travis-ci.org/kpumuk/meta-tags)
3
+ [![Travis-CI build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/kpumuk/meta-tags.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/kpumuk/meta-tags)
4
4
  [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/meta-tags.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/meta-tags)
5
5
  [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/kpumuk/meta-tags.png)](https://codeclimate.com/github/kpumuk/meta-tags)
6
+ [![Coverage](https://codeclimate.com/github/kpumuk/meta-tags/coverage.png)](https://codeclimate.com/github/kpumuk/meta-tags)
6
7
 
7
8
  Search Engine Optimization (SEO) plugin for Ruby on Rails applications.
8
9
 
@@ -11,6 +12,8 @@ Search Engine Optimization (SEO) plugin for Ruby on Rails applications.
11
12
  MetaTags master branch now fully supports Rails 3.0+ and is not backward
12
13
  compatible. Latest version fully compatible with 2.x is 1.2.3.
13
14
 
15
+ Ruby versions older than 2.0.0 are no longer officially supported.
16
+
14
17
  ## Installation
15
18
 
16
19
  Add the "meta-tags" gem to your `Gemfile`.
@@ -19,6 +22,20 @@ Add the "meta-tags" gem to your `Gemfile`.
19
22
 
20
23
  And run `bundle install` command.
21
24
 
25
+ ## Configuration
26
+
27
+ MetaTags follows best-practices for meta tags. Although default limits for
28
+ truncation have recommended values, you can change them to reflect your own
29
+ preferences. In order to do that, you can create an initializer
30
+ `config/initializers/meta_tags.rb`, with following code:
31
+
32
+ MetaTags.configure do |c|
33
+ c.title_limit = 70
34
+ c.description_limit = 160
35
+ c.keywords_limit = 255
36
+ c.keywords_separator = ', '
37
+ end
38
+
22
39
  ## SEO Basics and MetaTags
23
40
 
24
41
  ### Titles
@@ -27,11 +44,11 @@ Page titles are very important for Search engines. The titles in the
27
44
  browser are displayed in the title bar. The search engines would look at
28
45
  the this title bar to determine what the page is all about.
29
46
 
30
- set_meta_tags :title => 'Member Login'
47
+ set_meta_tags title: 'Member Login'
31
48
  # <title>Some Page Title</title>
32
- set_meta_tags :site => 'Site Title', :title => 'Member Login'
49
+ set_meta_tags site: 'Site Title', title: 'Member Login'
33
50
  # <title>Site Title | Page Title</title>
34
- set_meta_tags :site => 'Site Title', :title => 'Member Login', :reverse => true
51
+ set_meta_tags site: 'Site Title', title: 'Member Login', reverse: true
35
52
  # <title>Page Title | Site Title</title>
36
53
 
37
54
  Recommended title tag length: up to <b>70 characters</b>, <b>10 words</b>.
@@ -43,7 +60,7 @@ browsers as that of titles. But these descriptions may be displayed by
43
60
  some search engines. They are used to describe the contents of a page in
44
61
  2 or 3 sentences.
45
62
 
46
- set_meta_tags :description => "All text about keywords, other keywords"
63
+ set_meta_tags description: "All text about keywords, other keywords"
47
64
  # <meta name="description" content="All text about keywords, other keywords" />
48
65
 
49
66
  Recommended description tag length: up to <b>160 characters</b>.
@@ -54,7 +71,7 @@ Meta keywords tag are used to place your keywords that you think a
54
71
  surfer would search in Search engines. Repeating keywords unnecessarily
55
72
  would be considered spam and you may get permanently banned from SERP's
56
73
 
57
- set_meta_tags :keywords => %w[keyword1 Keyword2 KeyWord3]
74
+ set_meta_tags keywords: %w[keyword1 Keyword2 KeyWord3]
58
75
  # <meta name="keywords" content="keyword1, keyword2, keyword3" />
59
76
 
60
77
  Recommended keywords tag length: up to <b>255 characters</b>, <b>20 words</b>.
@@ -64,9 +81,9 @@ Recommended keywords tag length: up to <b>255 characters</b>, <b>20 words</b>.
64
81
  By using the noindex meta tag, you can signal to search engines to not
65
82
  include specific pages in their indexes.
66
83
 
67
- set_meta_tags :noindex => true
84
+ set_meta_tags noindex: true
68
85
  # <meta name="robots" content="noindex" />
69
- set_meta_tags :noindex => 'googlebot'
86
+ set_meta_tags noindex: 'googlebot'
70
87
  # <meta name="googlebot" content="noindex" />
71
88
 
72
89
  This is useful for pages like login, password reset, privacy policy, etc.
@@ -83,9 +100,9 @@ page. It's entirely likely that a robot might find the same links on some
83
100
  other page without a nofollow (perhaps on some other site), and so
84
101
  still arrives at your undesired page.
85
102
 
86
- set_meta_tags :nofollow => true
103
+ set_meta_tags nofollow: true
87
104
  # <meta name="robots" content="nofollow" />
88
- set_meta_tags :nofollow => 'googlebot'
105
+ set_meta_tags nofollow: 'googlebot'
89
106
  # <meta name="googlebot" content="nofollow" />
90
107
 
91
108
  Further reading:
@@ -99,7 +116,7 @@ Canonical link element tells a search engine what is the canonical or main URL
99
116
  for a content which have multiple URLs. The search engine will always return
100
117
  that URL, and link popularity and authority will be applied to that URL.
101
118
 
102
- set_meta_tags :canonical => "http://yoursite.com/canonical/url"
119
+ set_meta_tags canonical: "http://yoursite.com/canonical/url"
103
120
  # <link rel="canonical" href="http://yoursite.com/canonical/url" />
104
121
 
105
122
  Further reading:
@@ -107,11 +124,33 @@ Further reading:
107
124
  * [About rel="canonical"](http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=139394)
108
125
  * [Canonicalization](http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=139066)
109
126
 
127
+ ### Icon
128
+
129
+ A favicon (short for Favorite icon), also known as a shortcut icon, Web site
130
+ icon, tab icon or bookmark icon, is a file containing one or more small icons,
131
+ most commonly 16×16 pixels, associated with a particular website or web page.
132
+
133
+ set_meta_tags icon: '/favicon.ico'
134
+ # <link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon" />
135
+ set_meta_tags icon: '/favicon.png', type: 'image/png'
136
+ # <link rel="icon" href="/favicon.png" type="image/png" />
137
+ set_meta_tags icon: [
138
+ { href: '/images/icons/icon_96.png', sizes: '32x32 96x96', type: 'image/png' },
139
+ { href: '/images/icons/icon_itouch_precomp_32.png', rel: 'apple-touch-icon-precomposed', sizes: '32x32', type: 'image/png' },
140
+ ]
141
+ # <link rel="icon" href="/images/icons/icon_96.png" type="image/png" sizes="32x32 96x96" />
142
+ # <link rel="apple-touch-icon-precomposed" href="/images/icons/icon_itouch_precomp_32.png" type="image/png" sizes="32x32" />
143
+
144
+ Further reading:
145
+
146
+ * [Favicon](https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Favicon)
147
+ * [Touch Icons](https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/touch-icons)
148
+
110
149
  ### Author links
111
150
 
112
151
  Link to your Google+ profile using rel="author"
113
152
 
114
- set_meta_tags :author => "http://yourgplusprofile.com/profile/url"
153
+ set_meta_tags author: "http://yourgplusprofile.com/profile/url"
115
154
  # <link rel="author" href="http://yourgplusprofile.com/profile/url" />
116
155
 
117
156
  Further reading:
@@ -122,29 +161,38 @@ Further reading:
122
161
 
123
162
  Link to your Google+ profile using rel="publisher"
124
163
 
125
- set_meta_tags :publisher => "http://yourgplusprofile.com/profile/url"
164
+ set_meta_tags publisher: "http://yourgplusprofile.com/profile/url"
126
165
  # <link rel="publisher" href="http://yourgplusprofile.com/profile/url" />
127
166
 
128
167
  * [Link to your website](https://support.google.com/plus/answer/1713826?hl=en)
129
168
  * [The Difference Between rel=author & rel=publisher](http://www.websitemagazine.com/content/blogs/posts/archive/2013/02/05/the-difference-between-rel-author-amp-rel-publisher.aspx)
130
169
 
131
- ### Multi-regional and multilingual URLs
170
+ ### Multi-regional and multilingual URLs, RSS and mobile links
132
171
 
133
- Alternate link elements tell a search engine when there is content that's translated or targeted to
134
- users in a certain region.
172
+ Alternate link elements tell a search engine when there is content that's
173
+ translated or targeted to users in a certain region.
135
174
 
136
- set_meta_tags :alternate => { "fr" => "http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" }
175
+ set_meta_tags alternate: { "fr" => "http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" }
137
176
  # <link rel="alternate" href="http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" hreflang="fr" />
138
177
 
139
- set_meta_tags :alternate => { "fr" => "http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url",
140
- "de" => "http://yoursite.de/alternate/url" }
178
+ set_meta_tags alternate: { "fr" => "http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url",
179
+ "de" => "http://yoursite.de/alternate/url" }
141
180
  # <link rel="alternate" href="http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" hreflang="en" />
142
181
  # <link rel="alternate" href="http://yoursite.de/alternate/url" hreflang="de" />
143
182
 
183
+ If you need more than just multi-lingual links, you can use an alternative syntax:
184
+
185
+ set_meta_tags alternate: [
186
+ { href: 'http://example.fr/base/url', hreflang: 'fr' },
187
+ { href: 'http://example.com/feed.rss', type: 'application/rss+xml', title: 'RSS' },
188
+ { href: 'http://m.example.com/page-1', media: 'only screen and (max-width: 640px)'},
189
+ ]
190
+
144
191
  Further reading:
145
192
 
146
193
  * [Multi-regional and multilingual sites](https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/182192)
147
194
  * [About rel="alternate" hreflang="x"](http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=189077)
195
+ * [Separate URLs](https://developers.google.com/webmasters/mobile-sites/mobile-seo/configurations/separate-urls#annotation-in-the-html)
148
196
 
149
197
  ### Pagination links
150
198
 
@@ -152,9 +200,9 @@ Previous and next links indicate indicate the relationship between individual
152
200
  URLs. Using these attributes is a strong hint to Google that you want us to
153
201
  treat these pages as a logical sequence.
154
202
 
155
- set_meta_tags :prev => "http://yoursite.com/url?page=1"
203
+ set_meta_tags prev: "http://yoursite.com/url?page=1"
156
204
  # <link rel="prev" href="http://yoursite.com/url?page=1" />
157
- set_meta_tags :next => "http://yoursite.com/url?page=3"
205
+ set_meta_tags next: "http://yoursite.com/url?page=3"
158
206
  # <link rel="next" href="http://yoursite.com/url?page=3" />
159
207
 
160
208
  Further reading:
@@ -171,9 +219,9 @@ refreshed, by including the alternative URL in the content parameter. By
171
219
  setting the refresh time interval to zero (or a very low value), this allows
172
220
  meta refresh to be used as a method of URL redirection.
173
221
 
174
- set_meta_tags :refresh => 5
222
+ set_meta_tags refresh: 5
175
223
  # <meta content="5" http-equiv="refresh" />
176
- set_meta_tags :refresh => '5;url=http://example.com'
224
+ set_meta_tags refresh: '5;url=http://example.com'
177
225
  # <meta content="5;url=http://example.com" http-equiv="refresh" />
178
226
 
179
227
  Further reading:
@@ -181,14 +229,30 @@ Further reading:
181
229
  * [Meta refresh](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meta_refresh)
182
230
  * [What is the Meta Refresh Tag](http://webdesign.about.com/od/metataglibraries/a/aa080300a.htm)
183
231
 
232
+
233
+ ### Open Search
234
+
235
+ Open Search link element to describe a search engine in a standard and accessible format.
236
+
237
+ set_meta_tags open_search: {
238
+ title: "Open Search",
239
+ href: "/opensearch.xml"
240
+ }
241
+ # <link href="/opensearch.xml" rel="search" title="Open Search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" />
242
+
243
+ Further reading:
244
+
245
+ * [OpenSearch specs](http://www.opensearch.org/Specifications/OpenSearch/1.1)
246
+ * [OpenSearch wiki](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSearch)
247
+
184
248
  ### Hashes
185
249
 
186
250
  Any namespace can be built just passing any symbol name and a Hash. For example:
187
251
 
188
- set_meta_tags :foo => {
189
- :bar => "lorem",
190
- :baz => {
191
- :qux => "ipsum"
252
+ set_meta_tags foo: {
253
+ bar: "lorem",
254
+ baz: {
255
+ qux: "ipsum"
192
256
  }
193
257
  }
194
258
  # <meta property="foo:bar" content="lorem"/>
@@ -198,8 +262,8 @@ Any namespace can be built just passing any symbol name and a Hash. For example:
198
262
 
199
263
  Repeated meta tags can be built just using an Array inside a Hash. For example:
200
264
 
201
- set_meta_tags :og => {
202
- :image = ["http://example.com/rock.jpg", "http://example.com/rock2.jpg"]
265
+ set_meta_tags og: {
266
+ image: ["http://example.com/rock.jpg", "http://example.com/rock2.jpg"]
203
267
  }
204
268
  #<meta property="og:image" content="http://example.com/rock.jpg" />
205
269
  #<meta property="og:image" content="http://example.com/rock2.jpg" />
@@ -211,14 +275,14 @@ protocol `<meta>` tags to your webpages. The tags allow you to specify
211
275
  structured information about your web pages. The more information you provide, the more opportunities your web pages can be surfaced within Facebook today
212
276
  and in the future. Here's an example for a movie page:
213
277
 
214
- set_meta_tags :og => {
215
- :title => 'The Rock',
216
- :type => 'video.movie',
217
- :url => 'http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117500/',
218
- :image => 'http://ia.media-imdb.com/rock.jpg',
219
- :video => {
220
- :director => 'http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000881/',
221
- :writer => ['http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0918711/', 'http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0177018/']
278
+ set_meta_tags og: {
279
+ title: 'The Rock',
280
+ type: 'video.movie',
281
+ url: 'http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117500/',
282
+ image: 'http://ia.media-imdb.com/rock.jpg',
283
+ video: {
284
+ director: 'http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000881/',
285
+ writer: ['http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0918711/', 'http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0177018/']
222
286
  }
223
287
  }
224
288
  # <meta property="og:title" content="The Rock"/>
@@ -229,6 +293,33 @@ and in the future. Here's an example for a movie page:
229
293
  # <meta property="og:video:writer" content="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0918711/"/>
230
294
  # <meta property="og:video:writer" content="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0177018/"/>
231
295
 
296
+ Multiple images declared as an **array** (look at the `_` character):
297
+
298
+ set_meta_tags og: {
299
+ title: 'Two structured image properties',
300
+ type: 'website',
301
+ url: 'view-source:http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/image-array.html',
302
+ image: [{
303
+ _: 'http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/75.png',
304
+ width: 75,
305
+ height: 75,
306
+ },
307
+ {
308
+ _: 'http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/50.png',
309
+ width: 50,
310
+ height: 50,
311
+ }]
312
+ }
313
+ # <meta property="og:title" content="Two structured image properties">
314
+ # <meta property="og:type" content="website">
315
+ # <meta property="og:url" content="http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/image-array.html">
316
+ # <meta property="og:image" content="http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/75.png">
317
+ # <meta property="og:image:width" content="75">
318
+ # <meta property="og:image:height" content="75">
319
+ # <meta property="og:image" content="http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/50.png">
320
+ # <meta property="og:image:width" content="50">
321
+ # <meta property="og:image:height" content="50">
322
+
232
323
  Further reading:
233
324
 
234
325
  * [Open Graph protocol](http://developers.facebook.com/docs/opengraph/)
@@ -238,9 +329,9 @@ Further reading:
238
329
  Twitter cards make it possible for you to attach media experiences to Tweets that link to your content.
239
330
  There are 3 card types (summary, photo and player). Here's an example for summary:
240
331
 
241
- set_meta_tags :twitter => {
242
- :card => "summary",
243
- :site => "@username"
332
+ set_meta_tags twitter: {
333
+ card: "summary",
334
+ site: "@username"
244
335
  }
245
336
  # <meta name="twitter:card" content="summary"/>
246
337
  # <meta name="twitter:site" content="@username"/>
@@ -249,12 +340,12 @@ Take in consideration that if you're already using OpenGraph to describe data on
249
340
 
250
341
  When you need to generate a [Twitter Photo card](https://dev.twitter.com/docs/cards/types/photo-card), `twitter:image` property is a string, while image dimensions are specified using `twitter:image:width` and `twitter:image:height`, or a `Hash` objects in terms of MetaTags gems. There is a special syntax to make this work:
251
342
 
252
- set_meta_tags :twitter => {
253
- :card => "photo",
254
- :image => {
255
- :_ => "http://example.com/1.png",
256
- :width => 100,
257
- :height => 100,
343
+ set_meta_tags twitter: {
344
+ card: "photo",
345
+ image: {
346
+ _: "http://example.com/1.png",
347
+ width: 100,
348
+ height: 100,
258
349
  }
259
350
  }
260
351
  # <meta name="twitter:card" content="photo"/>
@@ -273,13 +364,13 @@ be rendered on the page, even if meta-tags gem does not know about them.
273
364
 
274
365
  Example:
275
366
 
276
- set_meta_tags :author => "Dmytro Shteflyuk"
367
+ set_meta_tags author: "Dmytro Shteflyuk"
277
368
  # <meta name="author" content="Dmytro Shteflyuk"/>
278
369
 
279
370
  You can also specify value as an Array, and values will be displayed as a list
280
371
  of `meta` tags:
281
372
 
282
- set_meta_tags :author => [ "Dmytro Shteflyuk", "John Doe" ]
373
+ set_meta_tags author: [ "Dmytro Shteflyuk", "John Doe" ]
283
374
  # <meta name="author" content="Dmytro Shteflyuk"/>
284
375
  # <meta name="author" content="John Doe"/>
285
376
 
@@ -288,7 +379,7 @@ of `meta` tags:
288
379
  First, add this code to your main layout:
289
380
 
290
381
  <head>
291
- <%= display_meta_tags :site => 'My website' %>
382
+ <%= display_meta_tags site: 'My website' %>
292
383
  </head>
293
384
 
294
385
  Then, to set the page title, add this to each of your views (see below for other options):
@@ -316,9 +407,9 @@ You can define following instance variables:
316
407
 
317
408
  Also you could use `set_meta_tags` method to define all meta tags simultaneously:
318
409
 
319
- set_meta_tags :title => 'Member Login',
320
- :description => 'Member login page.',
321
- :keywords => 'Site, Login, Members'
410
+ set_meta_tags title: 'Member Login',
411
+ description: 'Member login page.',
412
+ keywords: 'Site, Login, Members'
322
413
 
323
414
  You can find allowed options for `set_meta_tags` method below.
324
415
 
@@ -335,9 +426,9 @@ To set meta tags you can use following methods:
335
426
 
336
427
  Also there is `set_meta_tags` method exists:
337
428
 
338
- <% set_meta_tags :title => 'Member Login',
339
- :description => 'Member login page.',
340
- :keywords => 'Site, Login, Members' %>
429
+ <% set_meta_tags title: 'Member Login',
430
+ description: 'Member login page.',
431
+ keywords: 'Site, Login, Members' %>
341
432
 
342
433
  The `title` method returns title itself, so you can use it to show the title
343
434
  somewhere on the page:
@@ -356,6 +447,7 @@ Use these options to customize the title format:
356
447
  * `:title` — page title;
357
448
  * `:description` — page description;
358
449
  * `:keywords` — page keywords;
450
+ * `:charset` — page character set;
359
451
  * `:prefix` — text between site name and separator;
360
452
  * `:separator` — text used to separate website name from page title;
361
453
  * `:suffix` — text between separator and page title;
@@ -374,25 +466,25 @@ Use these options to customize the title format:
374
466
 
375
467
  And here are a few examples to give you ideas.
376
468
 
377
- <%= display_meta_tags :separator => "&mdash;".html_safe %>
378
- <%= display_meta_tags :prefix => false, :separator => ":" %>
379
- <%= display_meta_tags :lowercase => true %>
380
- <%= display_meta_tags :reverse => true, :prefix => false %>
381
- <%= display_meta_tags :og => { :title => 'The Rock', :type => 'video.movie' } %>
382
- <%= display_meta_tags :alternate => { 'zh-Hant' => 'http://example.com.tw/base/url' } %>
469
+ <%= display_meta_tags separator: "&mdash;".html_safe %>
470
+ <%= display_meta_tags prefix: false, separator: ":" %>
471
+ <%= display_meta_tags lowercase: true %>
472
+ <%= display_meta_tags reverse: true, prefix: false %>
473
+ <%= display_meta_tags og: { title: 'The Rock', type: 'video.movie' } %>
474
+ <%= display_meta_tags alternate: { 'zh-Hant' => 'http://example.com.tw/base/url' } %>
383
475
 
384
476
  ### Allowed values
385
477
 
386
478
  You can specify `:title` as a string or array:
387
479
 
388
- set_meta_tags :title => ['part1', 'part2'], :site => 'site'
480
+ set_meta_tags title: ['part1', 'part2'], site: 'site'
389
481
  # site | part1 | part2
390
- set_meta_tags :title => ['part1', 'part2'], :reverse => true, :site => 'site'
482
+ set_meta_tags title: ['part1', 'part2'], reverse: true, site: 'site'
391
483
  # part2 | part1 | site
392
484
 
393
485
  Keywords can be passed as string of comma-separated values, or as an array:
394
486
 
395
- set_meta_tags :keywords => ['tag1', 'tag2']
487
+ set_meta_tags keywords: ['tag1', 'tag2']
396
488
  # tag1, tag2
397
489
 
398
490
  Description is a string (HTML will be stripped from output string).
@@ -405,8 +497,8 @@ the `title`.
405
497
 
406
498
  Say, you have the following in your application layout:
407
499
 
408
- display_meta_tags :og => {
409
- :title => :title
500
+ display_meta_tags og: {
501
+ title: :title
410
502
  }
411
503
 
412
504
  The value of `og[:title]` is a symbol and therefore references the value of the
@@ -432,10 +524,10 @@ code duplication, you can define a helper in `application_helper.rb`:
432
524
 
433
525
  def default_meta_tags
434
526
  {
435
- :title => 'Member Login',
436
- :description => 'Member login page.',
437
- :keywords => 'Site, Login, Members',
438
- :separator => "&mdash;".html_safe,
527
+ title: 'Member Login',
528
+ description: 'Member login page.',
529
+ keywords: 'Site, Login, Members',
530
+ separator: "&mdash;".html_safe,
439
531
  }
440
532
  end
441
533
 
@@ -447,7 +539,7 @@ And in your pjax templates:
447
539
 
448
540
  <!-- set title here, so we can use it both in "display_title" and in "title" %>
449
541
  <% title "My Page title" %>
450
- <%= content_tag :div, :data => { :title => display_title(default_meta_tags) } do %>
542
+ <%= content_tag :div, data: { title: display_title(default_meta_tags) } do %>
451
543
  <h1><%= title %></h1>
452
544
  <!-- HTML goes here -->
453
545
  <% end %>