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Stradivari

Antonio Stradivari Portrait

Antonio Stradivari (Italian pronunciation: [anˈtɔːnjo stradiˈvaːri]; 1644 – 18 December 1737) was an Italian luthier and a crafter of string instruments such as violins, cellos, guitars, violas, and harps. Stradivari is generally considered the most significant and greatest artisan in this field.

Design

Like Antonio Stradivari built great musical instruments, this Ruby Gem is a collection of great tools you can play in your Ruby Web App, and produce the best symphonies ever.

History

Started off as a replacement of the Active Admin table and filter generators DSLs, during the development of an enterprise product that used to rely on Active Admin. It then stood up, started walking, and grew up on its own. 😄

Features

This Gem combines HAML and Bootstrap 3 to provide you easy generators for:

  • HTML Tables
  • CSV Tables
  • XLS Tables
  • Tabbed layouts
  • Definition Lists
  • Filter forms

The filter form generator includes also all controller code boilerplate to parse submitted form parameters, and model code to define callable search scopes and safely process the search parameters, thanks to the useful help from Ransack and PgSearch.

Whoa, what a lot of Gems this glues together! 😄

Installation

Add to your Gemfile

gem 'stradivari', github: 'ifad/stradivari'

Add to your app/assets/javascripts/application.js

//= require stradivari

Add to your app/assets/stylesheets/application.css

*= require stradivari

Add to your app/controllers/application_controller.rb

include Stradivari::Controller

Add to your config/initializers/stradivari.rb

module Stradivari
end

Usage

Table

Given a typical app/controllers/foo_controller.rb:

class FooController < ApplicationController
  def index
    @foos = Foo.order_by_awesomeness
  end
end

You'd have in your app/views/foo/index.html.haml:

= table_for @foos [header_visible: (true|false), body_visible: (true|false), footer_visible: (true|false), downloadable: (:xlsx|:csv)] do
  - row do |attributes,foo|
    attributes[:class] << " foo_#{foo.foo_type}"
    attributes['data-foo-id'] = foo.id
  - column :id
  - column :awesomeness, presence: true
  - column :something_special do |foo|
    - if foo.really_special?
      %strong This is a special Foo!
    - else
      Nothing to foo here.
  - column :lazy_to_translate, title: "Here we go"

This will generate the table head, body and foot markup, cycling over the @foos AR collection. Column headings take attribute names using t(), fitting nicely in Rails' I18n for Active Record.

The I18n'ed title can be overriden passing the :title option to the column generator, as shown above.

If you wish to set custom attributes on the table row itself, the row block will pass you a hash of the row attributes and the current object (@foos[n]). You may add or alter the hash contents and these will be set on the row element. A good use case for this would be if you wanted to bind a click handler to the row and needed to record the foo.id for an action specific to that object.

If there is no data, the table will be replaced with a div saying There is no data. You can change this in one of two ways - specify a different message as the no_data option:

= table_for @foos, no_data: 'There is nothing to see here'

or, provide a no_data block which will be rendered in place:

= table_for @foos do
  - no_data do
    There are no entries.
    %a.btn.btn-default{ href:'#' } Create

CSV

= csv_for @foos do
  - column :id
  - column :boolean_field
  - column :name, presence: true, html: {:class => "custom th class"}
  - column :text_field
  - column :string_field, title: "Here we go"
  - column :created_at

XLS

= xlsx_for @foos do
  - column :id
  - column :boolean_field
  - column :name, presence: true, html: {:class => "custom th class"}
  - column :text_field
  - column :string_field, title: "Here we go"
  - column :created_at

You can alter the XLS heading and body styles in the header:

= xlsx_for @foos, heading_style: { font_name: 'Verdana', sz: 15, bg_color: 'c6c6c6' } do
  - column :id
  - column text_field

You can also alter the style of each column:

= xlsx_for @foos do
  - column :id, style: { size: 8, alignment: { horizontal: :right } }

Each style is a hash of Axlsx styling parameters. Here is a subset of the Axslx style parameters that are probably most useful to you:

Parameter Example value Description
:sz 10 Font size (point size)
:font_name 'Verdana' Font to use
:bg_color 'c6c6c6c6' Background colour of cell (RGB 6-hex code)
:fg_color '00000000' Foreground colour of cell (RGB 6-hex code)
:alignment { horizontal: :center } Centred cell alignment
:alignment { vertical: :center } Vertically centred cell alignment
:alignment { wrap_text: true } Wrap overflowing text
:b true Bold text
:i true Italic text
:u :double Underline
:strike true Strike-through text
:border Axlsx::STYLE_THIN_BORDER Add border to cells

Tabs

= tabs_for @foos, flavor: (:tabs|:pills|:stacked), counters: (true|false) do |foos|
  - blank do
    .warning Nothing found
  - tab "Tab label", "tab_div_id", foos.scope, present: (false|true|:force)  do
    = render(partial: 'foos', locals: { foos: foos.scope })

When a tab scope is empty, Stradivari will by default not show the tab. You can force the tab to show with the present: true option. You can also force the rendering of the tab's content with the option present: :force.

The blank block is rendered in two cases. The first, if the tabs_for scope is empty and there are no tabs with option present: true. The second, if a tab has this option, but its personal scope is empty.

Tabs can be conditionally rendered using the if: option and passing a lambda to it. If it evaluates to a falsish value, the tab is hidden. The block is executed in the view context.

Tab content can be optionally loaded from a remote URL by passing the url: option. If you need to use Rails' route helpers, you have to reach to them through the view object, e.g.:

tabs_for @foos do
  - tab :bar, url: view.bars_path do
    .loading Loading...

When retrieving data from a remote URL, Stradivari will emit events at key lifecycle points:

Event Name Extra Parameters When
stradivari:tab:loading none Before the AJAX send
stradivari:tab:loaded none After a successful response is received
stradivari:tab:failed none After a failed response is received

These events will be emitted on the tab link that was clicked to initiate the remote load. This is useful if there are actions that must be performed before or after the remote data is loaded. For example, here is a simple example enabling pagination of a table loaded in the remote request:

The HAML:

= tabs_for @foos do |foos|
  - tab "Tab label", "tab_div_id", foos.scope, present: true, url: '/foos' do
    .loading Loading...

The partial /foos:

= table_for @foos do |foos|
  - column :bar
  - column :baz
= paginate @foos, remote: true

And finally, some javascript to bind the paginators correctly when the partial loads:

function bindPaginators(tab_pane) {
  $('nav.pagination a',tab_pane).on('ajax:success', function(e,data) {
    $(tab_pane).html(data);
    bindPaginators(tab_pane);
  });

$('[data-toggle=tab']).on('stradivari:tab:loaded', function(evt) {
  var tab_id = $(this).attr('href'); // href of the <a> element is "#tab_div_id"
  bindPaginators( $(tab_id) ); // $('#tab_div_id')
});

Dislocated tabs

The tabbed examples above place some constraints on how you lay out the tabs. It groups both the nav and the content under the same container. In some cases, you may wish to separatethe nav from the content. The tab_navs_for and tab_content_for helper methods allow this:

  .row
    .col-xs-3
      = tab_navs_for @people, flavor: :stacked do |people|
        - tab 'Option 1', 'option_1_id', people.foos, active: true
        - tab 'Option 2', 'option_2_id', people.bars
    .col-xs-3
      = tab_content_for @people do |people|
        - tab_content 'option_1_id', people.foos, active: true do |scope|
          This is content for option 1
        - tab_content 'option_2', people.bars do |scope|
          This is content for option 2

tab_navs_for takes the same options as tabs_for, as does its tab method, which does not take a block, however. Instead, the block is present in the tab option of tab_content_for. It is important both that the ID fields match between the two tab methods and that the scopes do as well, otherwise there may be display issues. You also have to set active: true on the content tab as well as the nav tab.

How to specify opened tabs at page load

You can specify which tabs to automatically open at the page loading adding their id to the parameter stradi_tabs[]= to the page URI. Multiple tabs can be specified.

es: http://mysite.com?stradi_tabs[]=bar&stradi_tabs[]=baz

Filter

Stradivari uses Ransack to perform search queries. Ransack provides a mapper that transforms form parameters into an ActiveRecord Relation query, using predicates such as id_eq or name_cont. For details about Ransack's predicates syntax, please have a look here.

To compose the search query for a model, Stradivari extends ActiveRecord with a stradivari_filter method that is available in your models.

The user-provided search query is available in your controller through the stradivari_filter_options method.

Stradivari provides a set of filter builders that you can (should) use to create your filter forms.

TODO: Stradivari is based on a (as of 04/2015) legacy version of Ransack, extending it to add functions that are now available upstream - so this should be fixed.

Model

Given this data model:

# db/schema.rb
create_table :posts do |t|
  t.integer :author_id
  t.string  :title
  t.text    :body
  t.timestamps
end

By default, with no changes to the model, you can already search on all model fields using Ransack features. Supposing you also have a specific scope you want to search on, you can define it in your model:

# app/models/post.rb
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :author

  stradivari_scope :by_author_name do |user_provided_input|
    joins(:author).where("authors.name LIKE ?", user_provided_input)
  end
end

Post.by_author_name behaves like every other ActiveRecord scope, and it is also marked accessible through user-provided search queries. Always be careful with user provided input. Stradivari or ActiveRecord can't protect you from shooting yourself in the foot if you want to. Follow the Robustness principle: Be conservative in what you do, be liberal in what you accept.

View

Let's then define a posts list table with some filters.

    / app/views/posts/index.html.haml

    = table_for @posts do
      - column :author do |post|
        = post.author.name
      - column :title
      - column :body do |post|
        = truncate(post.body, length: 140)
      - column :created_at
      - column :updated_at

    = filter_for Post do
      - selection :author_id, collection: Author.all
      - search :title
      - search :body
      - date_range :created_at
      - search :by_author_name

Behind the scenes, Stradivari builds an appropriate Ransack predicate for each builder, and builds the search form. Each builder has its own options and tweaks, see the source for now for more information.

In this case, the title and body attribute will generate a title_cont Ransack predicate that will be translated to a SQL LIKE operator, while the by_author_name field will pass along the user provided input to the corresponding stradivari_scope method defined on the Post model.

Controller

Start by adding Stradivari::Controller to your ApplicationController

# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
module ApplicationController
  include Stradivari::Controller
end

Then, in your PostsController

# app/controllers/posts_controller.rb
class PostsController < ApplicationController
  def index
    @posts = stradivari_filter(Post)
  end
end

@posts is an ActiveRecord::Relation that can be further manipulated, paginated, etc.

stradivari_filter is both the name of a controller helper, that accepts an ActiveRecord object (either a model or a Relation) and that invokes the search machinery, using as parameters the hash representation of the q query string parameter.

Stradivari defines also a .stradivari_filter method on your models, that behaves like a standard Active Record scope. It accepts and hash, that are the search parameters. You can pass your own hash, or you can get it from the query string using stradivari_filter_options.

The following two calls are identical:

stradivari_filter(Post)
Post.stradivari_filter(stradivari_filter_options)

The latter is useful if you want to massage the filter options yourself, or if you want to have a pure scopes chain - matter of taste.

The return value of .stradivari_filter_options is an Hash and can be manipulated as you see fit.

Sorting

To enable sorting support, currently Stradivari has a constraint on one model per controller. If you manage multiple models with the same controller (and you shouldn't ;-) then you can use sorting functions only on one of them.

The model can be defined in your controller by overriding the sorting_object_class method. By default, Stradivari will try to infer the model name from the controller name, e.g. a PostsController will try to find a Post model, but if this fail then it's up to you to define it. Example:

# app/controllers/posts_controller.rb
class PostsController
  # [ ... ]
  protected

  def sorting_object_class
    Post
  end
end

Default sort column and direction are, respectively, id and ASC. To override them, you can override the default_sort_column and default_sort_direction methods.

If we would want to display most recent posts first, for example, we could use:

# app/controllers/posts_controller.rb
class PostsController
  def default_sort_column
    'created_at'
  end

  def default_sort_direction
    'DESC'
  end
end

Alternatively, you can define sort parameters using the stradivari_filter DSL method:

stradivari_filter Post,
  default_sorting:   'created_at',
  default_direction: 'DESC'

Ransack provides basic sorting options for column names. The title column in the above example can be made sortable in the rendered table by adding the sortable: true option:

= table_for @posts do
  - column :title, sortable: true

For more complex sorting schemes, e.g. if we want to sort on the associated author name, we have to define the sorting semantics in the model first.

Stradivari looks up a scope in the model named after the column with a sort_by prefix and asc or desc as suffix. In this example, this would be:

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  scope :sort_by_author_asc,  -> { joins(:author).order('authors.name ASC') }
  scope :sort_by_author_desc, -> { joins(:author).order('authors.name DESC') }
end

= table_for @posts do
  - column :author, sortable: true do |post|
    = post.author.name

You can pass to the sortable option the scope name you want to use, e.g. if you called the above scope sort_by_person_asc, you would have needed to specify sortable: person. This is useful when reusing these scopes for multiple purposes.

Detached form

TODO

Full-text search

TODO

Prepending elements to the search form

- prepend(class: "options") do
  %p This is a prepended text

Definition Lists

= details_for @foos[1] do
  - field :id
  - field :boolean_field, title: "custom title"
  - field :name, presence: true, html: {:class => "custom dd class"}
  - field :text_field
  - field :string_field, title: "Here we go"
  - field :created_at

Stradivari Autocompleter

If you want to use the Stradivari Autocomplete, please add twitter-typeahead-rails to your project

The stradivari Autocompleter uses both the detached form and the form filters

It will use the keys in the filters to generate a list of autocomplete terms in the detached form

When you select a term from the autocomplete list, the corresponding filter is automagically selected in the filter list

To enable it, put the autocomplete:true option in the detached form search field

  • search :matching, title: 'Search', class: "focus", autocomplete: true

The class "focus" is used to give default focus to the search field

Then, on the checkbox fields in the filter, use the autocomplete: true option to tell to the Stradivari to grab that list and use it in the Autocompleter

  • checkbox :foo, collection: Foo.foos, priority: :low, title: "Foo", autocomplete: true

Tests

License

MIT

Copyright

© IFAD 2014-2015

Denominazione d'Origine Controllata

This software is Made in Italy 🇮🇹 😄.

Mission Statement

Organizations that allow you to write Open Source code are just awesome. It's actually a shame that it's not mandatory for public service engineers to share their code as Open Source - as this should be natural and embodied in any public service. So, for now, we try to lead this path, delighted to see remarkable examples such as NASA and ESA who deliver code and data for free.

Information and knowledge wants to be free, and through it we can make a huge impact in making the world a better place.

-- vjt Mon Jun 9 20:21:42 CEST 2014