I have a Google Chart's ColumnChart in a Rails project. This is generated and populated in JavaScript, by calling a Rails controller action which renders JSON.
The chart displays a month's worth of information for a customer.
Above the chart I have next and previous arrows which allow a customer to change the month displayed on the chart. These don't have any functionality as it stands.
My question is, what is the best way to save the state of the chart, in terms of it's current month for a customer viewing the chart.
Here is how the I was thinking of doing the workflow:
- One of the arrows is selected.
- This event is captured in JavaScript.
- Another request to the Rails action rendering JSON is performed with an additional GET parameter passed, based on an data attribute of the arrow button (Either + or - ).
- The chart is re-rendered using the new JSON response.
Would the logic around incrementing or decrementing the graphs current date be performed on the server side? With the chart's date being stored in a session array defaulting to the current date on first load?
On the other hand would it make sense to save the chart state on the client side within the JavaScript code or in cookie, then manipulate the date before it's sent to the Rails controller?
I've been developing with Rails for about 6 months and feel comfortable with it, but have only just recently started developing with JavaScript, using AJAX. My experience tying JS code together with Rails is some what limited at this point, so looking for some advice/best practices about how to approach this.
Any advice is much appreciated.