3

I am using ruby on rails 3. I have a model called Content. Within the controller, I extract some variables and pass them to the Viewer. In the Viewer, I would like to use of my self made functions so that I don't have too much logic and code in the Viewer. I defined these functions in the ContentsHelper module.

My functions defined in the ContentsHelper module are making use of ActionViewer helper functions, however these are not available in the ContentsHelper module. I am getting for example NoMethodError: undefined method content_tag' for #<Content:0x1025b9458> error.

How is it possible to make all the ActionViewer helper functions available?

Newbie.

following suggestion of Tim:

module ContentsHelper
include ActionView::Helpers
  def bla
    content_tag(:h2, self.title)        
end

I can run the bla method as Content.bla in the console. This is perfect!

But when I replacec content_tag with image_tag, then I run into trouble and get this error:

NoMethodError: undefined method `config'
from /Users/sonat/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/activemodel-3.0.0/lib/active_model/attribute_methods.rb:364:in `method_missing'
from /Users/sonat/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/activerecord-3.0.0/lib/active_record/attribute_methods.rb:46:in `method_missing'
from /Users/sonat/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/activerecord-3.0.0/lib/active_record/attribute_methods.rb:44:in `send'

I can see that module that is responsible of the image_tag method is missing "something". I would appreciate if you guys tell me the general approach in finding what is missing and how I could solve the problem.

4
  • what are your 'self made functions' doing? It would be helpful to seeing the code that you are describing. Rails sticks close to a set of configuration patterns. I recommend sticking really close to these patterns at first because they are proven. After awhile, you can make alterations or even contribute to the pattern itself. Jun 7, 2011 at 21:25
  • Looks like you might need to make sure that the :controller module-level variable is available: drawohara.com/post/24582894/… Jun 7, 2011 at 21:59
  • That your edit is talking about running Content.bla in the console is concerning. The console does not load the view context, it's really only for running model methods. There's so much context missing (like the whole request context) that means many things (like path helpers) can't work in the console without a lot of hacking around (which makes most efforts to use the console to test non-model methods invalid).
    – smathy
    Jun 8, 2011 at 16:04
  • (cc @natedavisolds) It would really help if we could see which TagHelpers methods you're trying to leverage in your helper, so that we can advise you on whether it would be better to split this out into a half-view, half-model style, or if string-generation at the model level really is a good way to go here. Jun 8, 2011 at 17:16

2 Answers 2

2

Looks like you're trying to do something odd like to use the helper method inside your model instead of inside your view. Helper methods are for views, not for models.

Added

Tim asked if I could provide some links to other resources, but really this is such basic stuff that I'm not aware of anything dealing with this. Mostly tutorials deal with unusual things like using helpers outside views.

So instead, here's some code:

app/helpers/contents_helper.rb

module ContentsHelper
  def foo
    content_tag :p, "Foo"
  end
end

app/views/contents/index.html.erb

<h1>Listing Contents</h1>

<%= foo %>

The HTML output when going to /contents URL

<h1>Listing Contents</h1>

<p>Foo</p>

And that's as hard as it is.

5
  • I agree about the oddity. And I am utterly confused I think. However, I understand that helpers are for viewers. And this is also my intention. For example: I am passing @content variable to a viewer. @content.body contains a long text and for presentation purposes I would like to shorten it, conditioned on other parameters (e.g. depending on it is content). I would not like to compute all this inside the viewer, so I need a helper which makes all this computations and outputs a html code. So consequently I need to use the ActionViewer::Helper methods inside my helper, but donnow how to?
    – NoNameNo
    Jun 7, 2011 at 21:22
  • For example say that this is my helper: module ContentsHelper;def shorten;content_tag(somecode);end;end. My problem is to make content_tag available here...
    – NoNameNo
    Jun 7, 2011 at 21:23
  • @NoNameNo: Here's kinda what he means, by the way: stackoverflow.com/questions/4127539/… Jun 7, 2011 at 22:06
  • See, @NoNameNo, your error message is in Content - which is the model class. If you were using the view helpers in the view then the error would be in something like #<#Class... So, it's clear from your error, that you're trying to use the view helper in the model. Adding the include that Tim recommends is a hack, but doesn't solve the real problem which is that you're misusing view helpers.
    – smathy
    Jun 8, 2011 at 15:57
  • ...also, just to clarify - you don't need to do anything magical to use ActionView methods in a helper as long as you're using the helper in the view (ie. in your .erb or .haml file) and not in your model. All the ActionView methods are available.
    – smathy
    Jun 8, 2011 at 15:58
2

content_tag:

Does this work?

module ContentsHelper
 include ActionView::Helpers
end

image_tag:

Looks like you'll have to make your models know where the images are located by implementing a #path_to_image(image) method.

I've set up a Gist for us to mock out the features you need here:

https://gist.github.com/1015333

You should be able to download and run forNoNameNo.rb (which should run quietly without errors.)

That file has some examples of what's needed to make image_tag work.


further discussion:

Helpers are probably the weirdest part of Rails. They're declared at the controller level, but are only included at the view level, and rely on weird parts of the controller stack for their info; and yet, the info they are mainly concerned with presenting is the model info. So they're spread across all these weird concerns.

To deal with code-organizations issues arising from all of this, people have tended toward the Presenter pattern. (Also see rbates' version)

That said, if you'd prefer to stray off the beaten path in rails, it's normally really useful to read the source code.

If you're using textmate:

    mate `gem which actionpack`../action_view

in Terminal.app should get your there. If you're using another editor/operating system you might have to navigate to whereever gem which actionpack tells you to go.

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  • Tim please see the new edit. your suggestion partially helps me.
    – NoNameNo
    Jun 7, 2011 at 21:50
  • You're making it sound far more complicated than it is. Helpers are not weird if you use them as they're intended. You don't need any special include and you certainly don't need to read any source code. You add a method to the helper, then call that method from the view. QED.
    – smathy
    Jun 8, 2011 at 16:07
  • @Jason, could you help by providing links to presenters and view model tutorials in your answer, so @NoNameNo can see how this logic would be properly factored? Jun 8, 2011 at 17:05
  • @NoNameNo please see the mentioned Gist. Jun 8, 2011 at 21:00

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