up vote 22 down vote favorite
5
share [g+] share [fb]

Same as http://stackoverflow.com/questions/658689/how-to-associate-labels-with-radio-buttons but for a rails app.

I have a form with some radio buttons, and would like to associate labels with them. The label form helper only takes a form field as a parameter, but in this case I have multiple radio buttons for a single form field. The only way I see to do it is to manually create a label, hard coding the ID that is auto generated for the radio button. Does anyone know of a better way to do it?

For example:

<% form_for(@message) do |f| %>
    <%= label :contactmethod %>
    <%= f.radio_button :contactmethod, 'email', :checked => true %> Email
    <%= f.radio_button :contactmethod, 'sms' %> SMS
<% end %>

This generates something like:

<label for="message_contactmethod">Contactmethod</label>
<input checked="checked" id="message_contactmethod_email" name="message[contactmethod]" value="email" type="radio"> Email
<input id="message_contactmethod_sms" name="message[contactmethod]" value="sms" type="radio"> SMS

What I want:

<input checked="checked" id="message_contactmethod_email" name="message[contactmethod]" value="email" type="radio"><label for="message_contactmethod_email">Email</label>
<input id="message_contactmethod_sms" name="message[contactmethod]" value="sms" type="radio"> <label for="message_contactmethod_sms">SMS</label>
link|improve this question

67% accept rate
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 24 down vote accepted
<% form_for(@message) do |f| %>
  <%= f.radio_button :contactmethod, 'email', :checked => true %> 
  <%= label :contactmethod_email, 'Email' %>
  <%= f.radio_button :contactmethod, 'sms' %>
  <%= label :contactmethod_sms, 'SMS' %>
<% end %>
link|improve this answer
4  
There is another way, too: passing a :value option to f.label will do the same thing. e.g. <%= f.label :contactmethod, 'SMS', :value => 'sms' %>. This sets the "for" attribute of the label tag correctly, which makes clicking the label select the appropriate radio button. In the answer above, simply using the label helper will cause the "for" attribute to be incorrect when the radio button is created with FormBuilder – John Douthat Nov 5 '10 at 0:06
I just wanted to say that as a newcomer to Rails, I've found this answer the one I keep coming back to. It's the gift that keeps on giving. Well, until I remember the proper syntax anyway... :) – John Gallagher Oct 20 '11 at 19:14
feedback

Passing the :value option to f.label will ensure the label tag's for attribute is the same as the id of the corresponding radio_button

<% form_for(@message) do |f| %>
  <%= f.radio_button :contactmethod, 'email' %> 
  <%= f.label :contactmethod, 'Email', :value => 'email' %>
  <%= f.radio_button :contactmethod, 'sms' %>
  <%= f.label :contactmethod, 'SMS', :value => 'sms' %>
<% end %>

See ActionView::Helpers::FormHelper#label

the :value option, which is designed to target labels for radio_button tags

link|improve this answer
2  
well, this may have 0 votes because it was answered months later, but actually it's the good one. Caveat: you need Rails >= 2.3.3 – tokland Dec 10 '10 at 15:27
now it has two :) – yuval Dec 30 '10 at 6:51
and now it has four! :) – sscirrus Feb 28 '11 at 11:57
feedback

If you want the object_name prefixed to any ID you should call form helpers on the form object.

- form_for(@message) do |f|
  = f.label :email

This also makes sure any submitted data is stored in memory should there be any validation errors etc.

If you can't call the form helper method on the form object, for example if you're using a tag helper (radio_button_tag etc.) you can interpolate the name using:

= radio_button_tag "#{f.object_name}[email]", @message.email

In this case you'd need to specify the value manually to preserve any submissions.

HTH.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.