77

I'm pretty happy with the solution that I came up with. Basically, I have a helper method that reloads the flash inline, and then I have an after_filter that clear out the flash if the request is xhr. Does anyone have a simpler solution than that?

Update: The solution above was written back in Rails 1.x and is no longer supported.

1
  • 3
    I like your solution.. after_filter { flash.discard if request.xhr? } Oct 22, 2012 at 23:30

15 Answers 15

64

You can also store the flash messages in the response headers using a after_filter block and display them using javascript:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
after_filter :flash_to_headers

def flash_to_headers
  return unless request.xhr?
  response.headers['X-Message'] = flash[:error]  unless flash[:error].blank?
  # repeat for other flash types...

  flash.discard  # don't want the flash to appear when you reload page
end

And in application.js add a global ajax handler. For jquery do something like this:

$(document).ajaxError(function(event, request) {
  var msg = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message');
  if (msg) alert(msg);
});

Replace alert() with your own javascript flash function or try jGrowl.

3
  • 6
    In addition, you can store the message type: response.headers['X-Message-Type'] = flash_type (whereas flash_type returns the most important type (error > success > notice). Also, you can use ajaxComplete then to include success cases: $(document).ajaxComplete(function(e, request, opts) { fireFlash(request.getResponseHeader('X-Message'), request.getResponseHeader('X-Message-Type')); });
    – crispy
    Dec 20, 2010 at 17:00
  • If your rails application is using Prototype to make ajax request, the previous jquery handler won't work. You'll need to use the corresponding Prototype handlers. See my answer above.
    – empz
    Feb 15, 2011 at 18:05
  • 1
    why do the comments at the top of application.js say it's not advisable to add code there?
    – Steve
    Feb 24, 2012 at 9:33
29

And here is my version based on @emzero, with modifications to work with jQuery, tested on Rails 3.2

application_controller.rb

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
    protect_from_forgery

    after_filter :flash_to_headers

    def flash_to_headers
        return unless request.xhr?
        response.headers['X-Message'] = flash_message
        response.headers["X-Message-Type"] = flash_type.to_s

        flash.discard # don't want the flash to appear when you reload page
    end

    private

    def flash_message
        [:error, :warning, :notice].each do |type|
            return flash[type] unless flash[type].blank?
        end
    end

    def flash_type
        [:error, :warning, :notice].each do |type|
            return type unless flash[type].blank?
        end
    end
end

application.js

// FLASH NOTICE ANIMATION
var fade_flash = function() {
    $("#flash_notice").delay(5000).fadeOut("slow");
    $("#flash_alert").delay(5000).fadeOut("slow");
    $("#flash_error").delay(5000).fadeOut("slow");
};
fade_flash();

var show_ajax_message = function(msg, type) {
    $("#flash-message").html('<div id="flash_'+type+'">'+msg+'</div>');
    fade_flash();
};

$(document).ajaxComplete(function(event, request) {
    var msg = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message');
    var type = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message-Type');
    show_ajax_message(msg, type); //use whatever popup, notification or whatever plugin you want
});

layout: application.html.haml

        #flash-message
            - flash.each do |name, msg|
                = content_tag :div, msg, :id => "flash_#{name}"
6
  • This also works on rails 3.1.0. Thanks Victor, worked right out of the box for me. Aug 8, 2012 at 21:33
  • 2
    Great compilation, though shouldn't "$("#flash-message").ajaxComplete(function(event, request)" be "$(document)"? Jan 13, 2013 at 2:32
  • For some reason, 'unless flash[type].blank?' doesn't work properly in some situations. An action with no flashes will render the sentence 'error, warning, notice'. I patched this in the js by using the line, 'if (msg != "error, warning, notice") show_ajax_message(msg, type)', but this is obviously a hacky solution. I can't figure out the real cause of the problem, though. Jan 31, 2013 at 17:15
  • 1
    [:error, :warning, :notice].each {} returns the array if the return condition is not met, so this code needs a bit of adjusting.. but otherwise, helpful.
    – radixhound
    Mar 25, 2013 at 21:49
  • 3
    If reworked the code to not return the string "error, warning, notice" as well as play nice with twitter-bootstrap gist.github.com/hbrandl/5253211
    – Hartwig
    Mar 27, 2013 at 10:43
15

This is needed in the js response

If you are using RSJ:

page.replace_html :notice, flash[:notice]
flash.discard

If you are using jQuery:

$("#flash_notice").html(<%=escape_javascript(flash.delete(:notice)) %>');
1
  • 3
    It looks like in Rails 3.1+ you need to use flash.discard(:notice) rather than flash.delete(:notice) Aug 28, 2012 at 5:08
15

I did it this way..

controller:

respond_to do |format|
    flash.now[:notice] = @msg / 'blah blah...'
    format.html 
    format.js
  end

view:

<div id='notice'>
    <%= render :partial => 'layouts/flash' , :locals => { :flash => flash } %>
</div>        

layouts/_flash.html.erb

<% flash.each do |name, msg| %>
            <div class="alert-message info"> 
                <a class="close dismiss" href="#">x</a> 
                <p><%= msg %></p>
            </div>
<% end %>

post.js.erb

$("#notice").html("<%= escape_javascript(render :partial => 'layouts/flash' , :locals => { :flash => flash }).html_safe %>");
2
  • In your controller, I can see a typo in flash.now[:notice]= @msg / 'blah blah..' I was also curious, you would put post.js.erb in path app/assets/javascripts wouldn't you?
    – RajG
    Dec 18, 2013 at 10:15
  • 1
    post.js.erb goes in controllers's view folder in this case its "views/posts/post.js.erb" . msg / "blah blah" i meant msg or some random message like "blah blah"
    – dbKooper
    Dec 18, 2013 at 13:20
10

Building on top of others -

(We pass the complete flash object as JSON, enabling us to reconstruct the complete flash object in the browser. This can be used to ensure that all flash messages are displayed in case multiple flash messages are generated by Rails.)

#application_controller.rb
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  after_filter :flash_to_headers

  def flash_to_headers
    if request.xhr?
      #avoiding XSS injections via flash
      flash_json = Hash[flash.map{|k,v| [k,ERB::Util.h(v)] }].to_json
      response.headers['X-Flash-Messages'] = flash_json
      flash.discard
    end
  end
end
//application.js
$(document).ajaxComplete(function(event, request){
  var flash = $.parseJSON(request.getResponseHeader('X-Flash-Messages'));
  if(!flash) return;
  if(flash.notice) { /* code to display the 'notice' flash */ $('.flash.notice').html(flash.notice); }
  if(flash.error) { /* code to display the 'error' flash */ alert(flash.error); }
  //so forth
}
1
  • Thnx. I modified function in application.js to like this $.each( $.parseJSON(request.getResponseHeader('X-Flash-Messages')), function(key,value){ flash_message(key,value) }); if you have js function to show flash message with params type of flash and message
    – Rahul garg
    Feb 5, 2013 at 12:46
6

Looks like what you need is flash.now[:notice], which is only available in the current action and not in the next. You can take a look at the documentation here: http://api.rubyonrails.com/classes/ActionController/Flash/FlashHash.html#M000327

3
  • Hey, I like this! Nobody else ? :S
    – Bachet
    Apr 22, 2012 at 18:22
  • 1
    @le_Daf: Using flash.now is a solution to a different problem. The contents of flash.now doesn't magically get inserted into the current page by an Ajax callback.
    – Confusion
    Jul 20, 2012 at 6:49
  • 3
    Should have been called flash.eventually instead of flash.now ;)
    – Deborah
    Dec 13, 2013 at 5:58
5

Assign the message in the controller like this:

  flash.now[:notice] = 'Your message'

app/views/layouts/application.js.erb - Layout for Ajax Requests. Here you can simply use

  <%= yield %>
  alert('<%= escape_javascript(flash.now[:notice]) %>'); 

or with some rich animations using gritter: http://boedesign.com/demos/gritter/

  <%= yield %>
  <% if flash.now[:notice] %>
    $.gritter.add({
      title: '--',
      text: '<%= escape_javascript(flash.now[:notice]) %>'
    });
  <% end %>
3

Based on gudleik answer:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  after_filter :flash_to_headers

def flash_to_headers
  return unless request.xhr?
  response.headers['X-Message'] = flash_message
  response.headers["X-Message-Type"] = flash_type

  flash.discard # don't want the flash to appear when you reload page
end

private

def flash_message
  [:error, :warning, :notice].each do |type|
    return flash[type] unless flash[type].blank?
  end
end

def flash_type
  [:error, :warning, :notice].each do |type|
    return type unless flash[type].blank?
  end
end

Then on your application.js (if you're using Rails native Prototype helpers) add:

Ajax.Responders.register({
onComplete: function(event, request) {
   var msg = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message');
   var type = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message-Type');
   showAjaxMessage(msg, type); //use whatever popup, notification or whatever plugin you want
   }
});
1
  • can you explain return unless request.xhr? I mean at the end of the current request if we;ve added any flash notices we add them to the response headers then in js we read them -- cool, but I'm not exactly sure why we have the above line Jun 28, 2019 at 9:48
3

There is a gem called Unobtrusive Flash that automatically encodes flash messages into a cookie. A javascript at client end checks for flash and display it in whatever way you want. This works seamlessly in both normal and ajax requests.

1
  • Solved all issues for me.
    – W.M.
    Sep 19, 2017 at 10:41
3

I modified Victor S' answer to fix some cases where flash[type].blank? didn't work as noted by few people in the comments.

after_filter :flash_to_headers

def flash_to_headers
   return unless request.xhr?
   response.headers['X-Message'] = flash_message
   response.headers["X-Message-Type"] = flash_type.to_s

   flash.discard # don't want the flash to appear when you reload page
end

private

def flash_message
   [:error, :warning, :notice, nil].each do |type|
     return "" if type.nil?
     return flash[type] unless flash[type].blank?
   end
end

def flash_type
   [:error, :warning, :notice, nil].each do |type|
       return "" if type.nil?
       return type unless flash[type].blank?
   end
end

Then rest is the same

// FLASH NOTICE ANIMATION

var fade_flash = function() {
    $(".flash_notice").delay(5000).fadeOut("slow");
    $(".flash_alert").delay(5000).fadeOut("slow");
    $(".flash_error").delay(5000).fadeOut("slow");
};

var show_ajax_message = function(msg, type) {
    $(".flash_message").html('<div class="flash_'+type+'">'+msg+'</div>');
    fade_flash();
};

$( document ).ajaxComplete(function(event, request) {
    var msg = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message');
    var type = request.getResponseHeader('X-Message-Type');
    show_ajax_message(msg, type); //use whatever popup, notification or whatever plugin you want

});
3

Here is my version (working with multiples flash notices and special characters UTF-8 encoding):

Inside ApplicationController:

after_filter :flash_to_headers
def flash_to_headers
  return unless request.xhr?
  [:error, :warning, :notice].each do |type|
    if flash[type]
      response.headers["X-Ajax-#{type.to_s.humanize}"] = flash[type]
    end
  end
  flash.discard
end

Inside my coffee-script (twitter bootstrap version):

css_class = {
    Notice: 'success',
    Warning: 'warning',
    Error: 'error'
}
$(document).ajaxComplete (event, request) ->
  for type in ["Notice", "Warning", "Error"]
    msg = request.getResponseHeader("X-Ajax-#{type}")
    if msg?
      $('#notices').append("<div class=\"alert #{css_class[type]}\">#{decodeURIComponent(escape(msg))}</div>")
2
  • It should work with asian characters with the utf8 decoding ;-) Feb 26, 2014 at 16:50
  • 1
    no, it's not!. I've checked the RFC document, and found that only ASCII characters are supported in http header.
    – fengd
    Feb 28, 2014 at 15:10
1

Another way would be update/display the "notice" div with the message from the your Ajax requests "OnFailure" handler. It gives you the ability to show these flash messages with required effect. I used this

 render :text => "Some error happened", :status => 444

in the Javascript

 new AjaxRequest(...

  ,
   OnFailure:function(transport) {
      $("#notice").update(transport.responseText);
     // show the message  
   }

);

HTH

1

I build an engine that includes some behavior to the application_controller to send the flash message in the response header as some of you guys propose.

https://github.com/bonzofenix/flajax

0

The only improvement I can think of is making the page.reload_flash default (not having to put it on every rjs file, and make it expicit if you don't want to reload the flash, something like page.keep_flash.

I wouldn't know where to start but knowing some rails I'm sure it's not that hard.

0

In case you want to use AJAX calls redirect_to should not be used in the controller. Rather, flash message should be explicitly denoted:

In your_controller:

respond_to :js

def your_ajax_method
  flash[:notice] = 'Your message!'
end

In the view that is named by your_ajax_method_in_the_controller

your_ajax_method_in_the_controller.js.haml

:plain
  $("form[data-remote]")
    .on("ajax:success", function(e, data, status, xhr) {
      $('.messages').html("#{escape_javascript(render 'layouts/messages')}");
      setTimeout(function(){ $(".alert").alert('close') }, 5000);
    })

Please, notice, that the messages class is an anchor point for rendering messages. This class should be present in your view or application layout. If you use ERB the line becomes $('.messages').html("<%= j(render 'layouts/messages') %>");

The above JavaScript embedded into HAML/ERB is the key to displaying flash messages when using AJAX. All other components remain the same for non-AJAX calls.

You may use your_ajax_method_in_the_controller.js.coffee or plain .js but then the rails variables won't be available to JS/Coffee. Even though I don't use variables here I prefer to wrap JS in HAML to keep consistent codebase.

I leverage Twitter Bootstrap for styling messages, thus $(".alert").alert('close') fades away the notice. And here is the messages partial:

layouts/_messages.html.haml

- flash.each do |name, msg|
  - if msg.is_a?(String)
    .alert-messages
      %div{class: "alert alert-#{name == :notice ? "success" : "error"} fade in"}
        %a.close{"data-dismiss" => "alert"} 
          %i.icon-remove-circle
        = content_tag :div, msg, id: "flash_#{name}"

Just in case, CSS for the alerts is below

.alert-messages {
  position: fixed;
  top: 37px;
  left: 30%;
  right: 30%;
  z-index: 7000;
}

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