4

I am trying to update Ruby on Rails to the version 3.1. I followed the Upgrading to Rails 3.1 screencast and all seems to work except for statements as

format.js { render(:update) { |page| page.redirect_to @article } }

In many controllers I have code like the following:

def create
  ...

  respond_to do |format|
    format.js { render(:update) { |page| page.redirect_to @article } }
  end
end

In all above cases, when I try to submit related forms performing JS requests, I get the following error:

ActionView::MissingTemplate (Missing template articles/update, application/update with {:handlers=>[:erb, :builder, :coffee], :formats=>[:js, :html], :locale=>[:en, :en]}. Searched in:
  * "/<MY_PROJECT_PATH>/app/views"
):

app/controllers/articles_controller.rb:114:in `create'

Rendered /<...>/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p136/gems/actionpack-3.1.0/lib/action_dispatch/middleware/templates/rescues/missing_template.erb within rescues/layout (0.3ms)

I know that the problem was related to RJS templates because them are not more available in the 3.1 release. So, in order to run some JavaScript code, in my controller files I may\should\can insert some JavaScript code as made in the following example:

format.js { render :js => "alert('Hello Rails');" }

BTW : ...but, is it recommended to use JavaScript code directly in a controller file?

Considering the above code in the create controller action, I would like to redirect user to the @article path after a successful submission. I can do:

format.js { render :js => "window.location.replace('#{article_url(@article)}');" }

..but, how can I do the same thing by following the "Ruby on Rails Way to do things"? How RoR 3.1 would handle these cases?

2 Answers 2

14

I'd go with:

render js: %(window.location.href='#{article_path @article}')

Or put something along the lines of this in your application_controller.rb:

def js_redirect_to(path)
  render js: %(window.location.href='#{path}') and return
end

Then in your controllers you can just call:

js_redirect_to(article_path @article)

Note I just made this up - not tested :)

2
  • Hi Mike - what do you do if you have to pass params? For me, any additional param's '?' gets converted to '%3F' and the redirect fails.
    – sscirrus
    Jan 20, 2013 at 6:06
  • @sscirrus I have updated my answer to work with params. (I switched from using window.location.pathname to window.location.href). Reasoning explained very clearly at stackoverflow.com/questions/3643041/…
    – Mike
    Jan 23, 2013 at 10:43
5

Using javascript code directly in controller files is not recommended.

Instead or .rjs, you can use .js.erb files. They act in a similar manner, allowing access to instance variables and helper methods.

6
  • 1
    If you're using JS purely to redirect the user, you should the controller to do the redirect.
    – Alex
    Sep 15, 2011 at 23:17
  • In my question the example I reported is "very simple" because I have only two cases in which the create controller action responds. When response cases are more (that is, the JavaScript sometime can redirect to the article path, some other time to another URL and so on...), how can I handle those "conditional" responses in the .js.erb file? P.S.: I am not sure, but I think it is not recommended to state class variables in controller files just to handle those situations. What do you advice about?
    – Backo
    Sep 15, 2011 at 23:17
  • So the solution I proposed in the question was correct? Can you (or someone else) "confirm" that and make me a little bit more sure?
    – Backo
    Sep 15, 2011 at 23:19
  • This is the right way to do it. Set your variables in the action (e.g. @article) and then in the js.erb you can render it to the screen via Jquery, Prototype, etc...
    – jschorr
    Sep 16, 2011 at 2:48
  • @james_schorr - Maybe I was not clear. Running Ruby on Rails 3.1, I would like to handle redirections on responding to JavaScript requests (I think, it should be made someway in the format.js { ... } statement or in a way that I would like to know...). How can I do that?
    – Backo
    Sep 19, 2011 at 2:21

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