rabl 0.0.3 → 0.0.4
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- data/README.md +80 -19
- data/lib/rabl/engine.rb +11 -1
- data/lib/rabl/version.rb +1 -1
- metadata +3 -3
data/README.md
CHANGED
@@ -14,23 +14,53 @@ This general templating system solves all of those problems.
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## Installation ##
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Install as a gem:
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gem install rabl
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or add to your Gemfile:
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# Gemfile
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gem 'rabl'
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and run `bundle install` to install the dependency.
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## Usage ##
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### Object Assignment ###
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To declare the data object to use in the template:
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# app/views/users/show.json.rabl
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object @user
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or a collection works:
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object @users
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and this will be used as the default data object for the rendering.
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### Attributes ###
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Basic usage of the templater:
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# app/views/users/show.json.rabl
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attributes :id, :foo, :bar
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or with aliased attributes:
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#
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# Take the value of model attribute `foo` and name the node `bar`
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# { bar : 5 }
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attribute :foo => :bar
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or multiple aliased attributes:
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# { baz : <bar value>, animal : <dog value> }
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attributes :bar => :baz, :dog => :animal
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### Child Nodes ###
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You can also add children nodes from an arbitrary object:
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child @posts => :foobar do
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attributes :id, :title
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attributes :id, :title
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end
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### Glued Attributes ###
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You can also append attributes to the root node:
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glue @post do
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attributes :id => :post_id, :name => :post_name
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end
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Use glue to add additional attributes to the parent object.
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### Custom Nodes ###
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This will generate a json response with the attributes specified. You can also include arbitrary code:
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# app/views/users/show.json.rabl
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code :full_name do |u|
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u.first_name + " " + u.last_name
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end
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You can use custom "code" nodes to create flexible representations of a value utilizing data from the model.
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### Partials ###
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Often you need to access sub-objects in order to construct your own custom nodes for more complex associations. You can get access to the hash representation of another object:
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code :location do
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{ :
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{ :city => @city, :address => partial("web/users/address", :object => @address) }
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end
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or an object associated to the parent model:
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code :location do |m|
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{ :city => m.city, :address => partial("web/users/address", :object => m.address) }
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end
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You can use these to construct arbitrarily complex nodes for APIs.
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### Inheritance ###
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Another common limitation of many json builders is code redundancy. Typically every representation of an object across endpoints share common attributes or nodes. The nodes for a 'post' object are probably the same or similar in most references throughout the various endpoints.
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RABL has the ability to extend other "base" rabl templates and additional attributes:
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# app/views/users/advanced.json.rabl
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extends "users/base" # another RABL template in "app/views/users/base.json.rabl"
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code :can_drink do |m|
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m.age > 21
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end
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You can also extend other rabl templates in constructing nodes to reduce duplication:
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# app/views/users/show.json.rabl
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child @address do
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extends "address/item"
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end
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Using partials and inheritance can significantly reduce code duplication in your templates.
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## Issues ##
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* I am sloppy and once again failed to unit test this. Don't use it in production until I do obviously.
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data/lib/rabl/engine.rb
CHANGED
@@ -6,7 +6,8 @@ module Rabl
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@_handler = handler
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@_options = { :handler => @_handler, :vars => @_vars, :engine => self }
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self.copy_instance_variables_from(@_handler, [:@assigns, :@helpers]);
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@_object = vars[:object] ||
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@_object = vars[:object] || self.default_object
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# raise @user.inspect + " - " + @_handler.instance_variable_get(:@options).inspect + " - " + @_handler.inspect
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instance_eval(source_string) if source_string.present?
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instance_eval(&block) if block_given?
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end
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@@ -89,5 +90,14 @@ module Rabl
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return object unless object.is_a?(ActiveRecord::Base) || object.first.is_a?(ActiveRecord::Base)
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self.class.new(@_vars.merge(:object => object), @_handler, source, &block).to_hash(:root => false)
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end
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protected
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# Returns a guess at the default object for this template
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def default_object
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@_handler.respond_to?(:controller) ?
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instance_variable_get("@#{@_handler.controller.controller_name}") :
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nil
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end
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end
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end
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data/lib/rabl/version.rb
CHANGED
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
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name: rabl
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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hash:
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hash: 23
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prerelease:
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segments:
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- 0
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- 0
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version: 0.0.
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version: 0.0.4
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platform: ruby
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authors:
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- Nathan Esquenazi
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