5

I'm using haml 3.1.4 and haml-rails 0.3.5

The issue I'm having only occurs on the server (production) and locally (test) but not in development (both appear to be using the same gem versions)

=form_for @thing, :remote => true do |f|
  =hidden_field_tag :template, 'thing'
  %table
    %thead
      %tr
        %th
          Name
        %th
          =image_tag 'cancel.png'
    %tbody
      =f.fields_for :items do |item_fields|
        %tr
          %td
            =f.text_field :name
          %td
  =f.submit 'Save'

it outputs the following html save text:

<input type='hidden' value='thing' /><table><thead><tr><th>Name</th><th><img src='cancel.png.....' /></tr></thead>

followed be the rendered html above.

How can I narrow down what the differences are between test/production and development?

Any ideas? :)

EDIT: It might be worth mentioning that this is the second form for '@thing' on the page. The first one renders fine, the second one is where the issue is.

5
  • I don't think you're supposed to have the "=" on the form_for line. Try "- form_for". I've been tripped up by this before, though it's weird you're seeing different behavior in development.
    – Alex Dixon
    Jan 19, 2013 at 17:51
  • You need the = because that's what outputs the form HTML tags.
    – Geoff
    Jan 21, 2013 at 23:32
  • so the rendered output after the closing </thead> is all escaped like &lt;tbody&gt;? Also, did you miss the closing </th> or is this part of the problem?
    – mikezter
    Jan 22, 2013 at 12:07
  • I checked production Gem.loaded_specs for the haml version and they are the same as development. I was really hoping that was the issue. Jan 23, 2013 at 17:13
  • Haml should be generating the closing th Jan 23, 2013 at 20:54

3 Answers 3

1

I have a couple theories.

Whitespace is very important in haml. Is it possible you have a tab somewhere and whitespaces elsewhere?

Do both your form_fors have remote: true? That creates some extra div output which I suppose could confuse the DOM if it's reusing ids.

Are you sure you are using the = on form_for because without it, it won't output the HTML form tags.

I'm afraid I'm just guessing, and none of these would explain why it works in development.

Perhaps it helps...

0

By the looks of it you are not closing the tag is this your problem? Anyway in regards to narrowing down the differences between test/prod/dev you really need to check out the contents of your /config/ folder. I can suggest for testing that you can use the Rails.env == "development" for choosing your environment and then trying the debugger and looking for differences.

2
  • haml doesn't require closing tags.
    – Geoff
    Jan 21, 2013 at 23:32
  • well the html output doesn't show a closing tag so I took it just like the %td =f.text_field :name %td the %table might need one also just a thought. Jan 21, 2013 at 23:59
0

You might be using two different versions of haml. Could be one version is more strict on the space after the '='. I would write it like:

= form_for @thing, :remote => true do |f|
  = hidden_field_tag :template, 'thing'
  %table
    %thead
      %tr
        %th Name
        %th= image_tag 'cancel.png'
    %tbody
      = f.fields_for :items do |item_fields|
        %tr
          %td= f.text_field :name
          %td
  = f.submit 'Save'

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