3

I'm trying to get a Glyphicon to show up using Bootstrap in a Rails app, but I can't figure out how to get it to show. I've read through several questions on here that attempt to solve this problem by fixing the path. However, having gone through those questions/answers, I'm still stuck b/c the glyphicon won't show up.

Both the images and stylesheets are in the same "Assets" directory. The HTML I'm using seems to be working fine b/c when I inspect the element in Chrome it's finding the appropriate class, which is linking to the Bootstrap stylesheet.

HTML:

<p><%= link_to raw('<i class="icon-share-alt"></i>'), post %></p>

CSS (default from Bootstrap EXCEPT I updated /img to /images b/c that's what my images directory is called):

[class^="icon-"],
[class*=" icon-"] {
display: inline-block;
width: 14px;
height: 14px;
margin-top: 1px;
*margin-right: .3em;
line-height: 14px;
vertical-align: text-top;
background-image: url("../images/glyphicons-halflings.png");
background-position: 14px 14px;
background-repeat: no-repeat;
}

One more comment that might help. When I inspect element on Chrome and hover over the "../images/glyphics..." in the right rail of the inspect element section, Chrome cites localhost:3000/assets/../images/glyphicons-halflings.png as the path, which is NOT the correct path from the root of my application. I suspect this is just shorthand in Chrome, but, then again, seems odd they wouldn't cite the correct path unless this is the root of my problem. That said, I still don't know how to fix it.

2
  • If you are using the asset pipeline you shouldn't use relative paths in your CSS.
    – Wukerplank
    Jun 15, 2013 at 19:41
  • @newbie If one of the answers below satisfies your question, you should mark it as accepted. Thanks and welcome to SO.
    – tralston
    Jun 15, 2013 at 23:57

4 Answers 4

6

I'm assuming you're using Rails version 3.1 or later since you are mentioning the "assets" folder, which is part of the Asset Pipeline feature of Rails. Briefly, anything you put in the "app/assets" folder at the base of your rails project will be automagically routed to the assets folder on your server. For example:

  • your_app/app/assets/stylesheets/style.css >>> localhost:3000/assets/style.css
  • your_app/app/assets/images/button.png >>> localhost:3000/assets/button.png
  • your_app/app/assets/javascripts/script.js >>> localhost:3000/assets/script.js

In other words, rails lets you organize your files in your source folder, but combines them all together for the end user in the assets folder. For more information about the Asset Pipeline, see Ruby on Rails Guides: Asset Pipeline.

Your problem is that your CSS knows nothing about rails, and when its code is interpreted in the browser, it sees itself in the assets folder. This is also true of the other images and javascripts you have. The easiest solution would be to change url("../images/glyphicons-halflings.png"); to url("/assets/glyphicons-halflings.png");. This works because both the CSS file and the image will see each other in the assets folder when viewed in the browser.

A second solution would to use the sass-rails gem. If you generated your app using the default method, you'll likely find it in your Gemfile. If that's the case, then you can rename your CSS file from something.css to something.css.scss (or .css.sass, but I prefer the former). This will let you use rails's built-in support for SASS, specifically the following:

background: image-url("glyphicons-halflings.png");
### Outputs: background: url(/assets/glyphicons-halflings.png);

The image-url command when used in your rails app's .css.scss file will take care of finding the image and outputting the right folder.

A third option would be to use the twitter-bootstrap-rails gem, which is compatible with the asset pipeline in Rails 3.1 or later.

1
  • solid. the easiest solution worked, but i think, based on what the other responder said, that the "third option" is the smartest one to do. i'll respond to his comment above further, but thanks for giving me the easy solution and reinforcing that i should just use the twitter-bootstrap-rails gem (though i'm not sure what i'm going to break when i do that, but will install it and see what happens).
    – newbie
    Jun 15, 2013 at 23:12
1

TL;DR: use bootstrap-sass gem instead (the rest of the answer below suggests bootstrap-rails gem, which is not as convenient, because then you need other dependencies, like LESS, and it gets a bit complicated.

First of all, I should mention that there's more than one way to add Bootstrap to your app. I've tried the manual way first (which I suspect is what you're doing), and actually got into the same problem as you did (not sure if for the same cause or not). So then I've tried the recommended way, which is through a gem called twitter-bootstrap-rails. I followed this railscast:

http://railscasts.com/episodes/328-twitter-bootstrap-basics

Then I ran into a problem, however, of not having another gem - 'less', which was causing a nasty runtime error. So I've added two more gems, for a total of three, to my Gemfile: - gem 'twitter-bootstrap-rails' - gem 'therubyracer' - gem 'less-rails' (missing this was the cause for the runtime error).

Their exact role I am still not sure about -- but they play an important role in Rails asset pipeline. 'less' is what Bootstrap depends on, apparently, instead of 'sass', which Rails comes with.

So, after installing them with bundle install -- those, and their other dependencies, most notable libv8 -- I've got Bootstrap working perfectly, including <i class="icon-share-alt"></i> =)

5
  • PS: this was the S/O link which describes the problem I ran into, and which suggested the solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/13888381/… Jun 15, 2013 at 21:00
  • alex, thanks for the guidance. sounds like your suggestion is the right way to go (reinforced by tralston below). i watched the railscast you cited, but, being a newbie, i of course immediately wondered what i'm going to break if i just install the gem even though i have all these existing bootstrap files in my app. i'm going to just follow the instructions, though, and see what happens. hopefully i don't blow anything up too bad. thanks again.
    – newbie
    Jun 15, 2013 at 23:15
  • No problem! I am actually learning Rails myself here... and I've just found another angle of attack. [See here] (ruby.railstutorial.org/chapters/filling-in-the-layout#top). It's a great (free) Rails book, which covers just enough of other things, from git to gems to bundle to rvm, to make a newbie comfortable. I really recommend it. But I digress - apparently, there is another Ruby gem, called bootstrap-sass, which is exactly what you need in order not to worry about installing less (a gem native to Bootstrap, so to say). Jun 16, 2013 at 14:41
  • 1
    oh, and here's a nice explanation of SASS vs LESS: blog.blakesimpson.co.uk/read/… -- SASS is written in Ruby and so works with Rails out of the box, but LESS is written in JavaScript, and because of that it requires the additional dependencies (which are quite heavy). So I got all the Bootstrap, including glyphicons, working in under 5 minutes with bootstrap-sass gem! Jun 16, 2013 at 15:09
  • thanks alex. very helpful. i have the sass gem installed (by default, i think, w/ a new rails project). didn't get the glyphicons to work for me, though, w/o making that change tralston cited w/ the path.
    – newbie
    Jun 16, 2013 at 21:55
1

For those wondering why the icons do not display in production mode, try replacing the css property background-image with background instead:

background: url(<%= asset_path 'glyphicons-halflings.png' %>);

... and optionally add a .erb extension to the end of your boostrap.css file so that the asset_path helper works. This is without the use of any bootstrap gems.

More on this from another SO question here.

0

Please, see this answer. It's better than modify css file, where turns dificult to upgrade to newer versions. So, the ideia is simple, create routes to this files or a generic one with parameter interpreter. Other simple solution is put this images in "public/img".

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.