2

I get a RoutingError whenever a username has an @ symbol in it:

No route matches {:controller=>"users", :action=>"show", :username=>"[email protected]"}

My routes looks like this:

match 'users/:username' => 'users#show', :as => :show_other_user

And my view:

<% for user in @users %>
  <tr>
    <td><%= image_tag avatar_url(user, 50) %></td>
    <td><%= link_to user.name, show_other_user_path(:username => user.username) %></td>
    <td><%= common_friends(current_user, user).size %></td>
  </tr>
<% end %>

Everything works find if the username doesn't have the @ symbol.

1 Answer 1

3

Your route isn't breaking because of the @, it is breaking because of the .. Rails will see the . and think you're trying to specify a format (i.e. .html, .xml, ...). You need to kludge around the auto-format detection stuff a little bit by updating your route with something like this:

match 'users/:username' => 'users#show', :as => :show_other_user, :constraints => { :username => /.*/ }

The :constraints should sort out your routing problems (you'd use :requirements for Rails 2).

2
  • This doesn't work, I get the error: No route matches {:requirements=>{:username=>/.*/}, :controller=>"users", :action=>"show", :username=>"[email protected]"} Sep 13, 2011 at 20:31
  • @LanguagesNamedAfterCofee: Sorry, :requirements is Rails2, you'd want :constraints for Rails3. Sep 13, 2011 at 20:34

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.