5

I have a ruby gem, poirot, which enables the use of mustache templates in Rails. The template handler I have was extending from ActionView::Template::Handler, however this appears to be deprecated in Rails 3.1.

I have re-factored the handler to comply with the deprecation warnings. In doing this I am now unable to pass locals, or the view context, to the template. I can't seem to find out how to get this working with Rails 3.1.

module Poirot
  class Handler

    attr_reader :template

    def initialize(template)
      @template = template
    end

    def self.call(template, *args)
      self.new(template).call
    end

    def call
      view_path = "#{template.virtual_path}_view"
      abs_view_path = Rails.root.join('app/views', view_path)
      view_class = begin
        view_path.classify.constantize
      rescue NameError => e
        Poirot::View
      end
      "#{view_class}.new(self, '#{template.source.gsub(/'/, "\\\\'")}').render.html_safe"
    end
  end
end

In my code above for the handler I get passed the template, which is an instance of ActionView::Template. But I'm not sure how to get the view context, which should include the locals etc

Can someone point me in the right direction?

2 Answers 2

0

Okay I have a solution, I'm not sure it is the best, it feels a little hacky to me!

In my view class I have managed to get access to the locals by doing the following:

locals = view_context.send(:view_renderer).send(:_partial_renderer).instance_variable_get("@locals") || {}

This feels a little messy as both view_renderer and _partial_renderer are private, and there is no proper accessor to the locals ivar.

I'm still hoping there is a better way to do this!

0

I spent about 4 hours investigating source code to find a solution, and now it's seems very simple:

just add "local_assigns" where you are want to eval it and use.

For example:

"#{view_class}.new(self, '#{template.source.gsub(/'/, "\\\\'")}', local_assigns).render.html_safe"

this string will be evaluted inside the module context - ActionView::CompiledTemplates and local_assigns will be accessible there.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.