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So I've got a form in my Rails app which uses a custom FormBuilder to give me some custom field tags

<% form_for :staff_member, @staff_member, :builder => MyFormBuilder do |f| %>
[...]
    <%= render :partial => "staff_members/forms/personal_details", :locals => {:f => f, :skill_groups => @skill_groups, :staff_member => @staff_member} %>	
[...]
<% end %>

Now, this partial is in an area of the form which gets replaces by an AJAX callback. What I end up doing from the controller in response to the AJAX request is:

render :partial => "staff_members/forms/personal_details", :locals => {:skill_groups => @skill_groups, :staff_member => @staff_member}

However, if I do that then the form breaks, as the FormBuilder object I used in the form_for is no longer available. Is there any way for me to use my custom FormBuilder object inside a partial used for an AJAX callback?

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2 Answers

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Use fields_for inside your partial. It performs a similar task but without wrapping the form tags. See the API docs.

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Hi, this is what I ended up doing in the end :) It's a bit awkward but it actually feels nicer passing objects around than form builders – Gareth Jan 4 at 0:27
But what do you do in the situation where you actually need that form builder in there? e.g. when you're calling on nested fields (f.fields_for)? – Andrew Vit Jun 17 at 22:01
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You could instantiate a new instance of your form builder in the controller, though it feels sort of lousy to me:

# in the controller
render :partial => {
  :f => MyFormBuilder.new(:staff_member, @staff_member, template),
  :skill_groups => @skill_groups,
  :staff_member => @staff_member
}

Alternatively, you could move more of the update logic to be client side which wouldn't require you to worry about rendering anything at all. You could just update the values via JS. Not sure if that works for your project though.

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