2

Essentially I want something like the following:

<code class="snippet">
   <%= html_escape do %>
      <a href="#">My markup displayed to user</a>
   <% end %>
</code>

However the html_escape method does not accept a block. If this is not built into Rails API somewhere else, perhaps using some helper, does anyone have advice on how to make a custom helper where the yield statement output is captured into a string that I can then escape myself?

Thanks,

Keith

4
  • I am realizing that maybe I should be marking up individual lines of HTML code escaped as strings to achieve the proper spacing. Really I want something like the code snippet in this post minus the coloration and code formatting.
    – kgx
    Apr 17, 2013 at 20:14
  • Do you want <a href="#">My markup displayed to user</a> to be displayed on the page? Apr 17, 2013 at 20:26
  • Yes, and since I want the escaped HTML to be formatted in a particular way, I decided to compose the HTML manually as strings (very tedious) in a helper so I can add the proper line breaks and tabs.
    – kgx
    Apr 19, 2013 at 15:53
  • I was never able to capture the ERB block and redisplay it as escaped HTML...
    – kgx
    Apr 19, 2013 at 15:54

1 Answer 1

7

Rails' capture and escape_once helper methods can create a String from a block in an erb template and then output an escaped version of it:

<% snippet = capture do %>
    <a href="#">My markup displayed to user</a>
<% end %>
<code><%= escape_once snippet %></code>

content_for is another helper that provides similar functionality to capture, that you may consider using depending on the situation.

To explain, snippet is an ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer, and is why escape_once is needed. You could achieve the same by calling snippet.to_str instead of escape_once snippet (However .to_s will not work as that is different to .to_str in ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer).

1
  • thanks for the answer. That is a great solution. I recently discovered capture and have been using it elsewhere.
    – kgx
    Dec 19, 2013 at 18:57

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