0

i have a menu in my application layout say

 <ul>
    <li><a href="index.asp">Home</a></li>
    <li><a href="dashboard.asp">Dashboard</a></li>
    <li><a class="active" href="/people">People</a></li>
 </ul>

now i would like to change the class of different anchor from different page... say for the home page it will be like ...

  <ul>
     <li><a class="active" href="index.asp">Home</a></li>
     <li><a href="dashboard.asp">Dashboard</a></li>
     <li><a href="/people">People</a></li>
  </ul>

how to achieve this ? BTW i'm new to ror.

4 Answers 4

1

This can be done as follows.

Write a helper method to do this (helper methods are for do some simple functions for presentation layout, this is an ideal case).

In Rails you can get the currently executing controller name as

params[:controller]

and executing action as

params[:action] 

So in your application helper you can write something like

module ApplicationHelper
  def active_link (link)
    (link == params[:controller]) ? "active" : ""
  end
end

In above example, if the current controller matches current link, then it will return a string as "active" or else return a blank string

Finally in your view,

<ul>
     <li><a class="<%= active_link('home') %>" href="index.asp">Home</a></li>
     <li><a href="<%= active_link('dashbord') %>">Dashboard</a></li>
     <li><a href="<%= active_link('people') %>">People</a></li>
</ul>

Notes

  • This solution assumes that you have a controller with matching name for each link.
  • I haven't tested this, but should be working, but this should be the concept
0
0

One way to do this is to pass an instance variable from your controller. For example, if you're sent to the home page:

class Pages < ApplicationController
  def index
    @active = "index"
  end
end

Now, when you're in the navigation view, you'd do something like:

<li><a class="<%= "active" if @active == "index" %>" href="index.asp">Home</a></li>
0

For what it's worth, you could also override link_to:

def link_to(*args, &block)
  options_key, html_key = block_given? ? [0, 1] : [1, 2]

  args[html_key] ||= {}
  args[html_key][:class] = [args[html_key][:class], "active"].compact.join(' ') if current_page?(args[options_key])

  super(*args, &block)
end

You can use it like this:

<ul>
    <li><%= link_to "Home", "index.asp" %></li>
    <li><%= link_to "Dashboard", "dashboard.asp" %></li>
    <li><%= link_to "People", "/people" %></li>
</ul>
0

There's a link_to_unless_current helper which does what you need, although not always as expected - it ignores the query params. But if all your links point to different actions/controllers, that should do.

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