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TL;DR: Microdata forces you to use the itemprop on the same element as the itemtype that is this itemprops vaule. How do you deal with this, if you want to break up your template into partials? The element may only appear in one of the two places, either in the containing template or the included partial, both of which does not really work well.

I am using Rails with haml, but I guess my question applies to any templating engine, where you can split up your template into smaller partials. I am heavily making use of partials, that means my templates are usually no longer than 10 lines of code. But fitting microdata into these seems overly complicated, so how are you supposed to use microdata properly with partials?

Take this example:

#app/views/article/show.html.haml
%p Hey, Welcome! Read This wonderful article:
= render @article

#app/views/articles/_article.html.haml
%div[ article ]
  %h1= @article.title
  %p= @article.description
  %div= render @article.video

#app/views/videos/_video.html.haml
%div[ video ]
  %h2= video.file_name
  %video{ src: video.url }

And now with microdata:

#app/views/articles/_article.html.haml
%div[ article ]{ itemscope: true, itemtype: 'http://schema.org/Article' }
  %h1{ itemprop: 'name' }= @article.title
  %p{ itemprop: 'description' }= @article.description
  %div{ itemprop: 'video' }= render @article.video

And then what? I have to add the VideoObject itemtype on the same div, that has the itemprop: 'video' because, that's how microdata works. So:

#app/views/articles/_article.html.haml
%div{ itemprop: 'video', itemscope: true, itemtype: 'http://schema.org/VideoObject' }= render @article.video

But then I can't use that same itemtype again in the video partial. This would now be invalid:

#app/views/videos/_video.html.haml
%div[ video, itemscope: true, itemtype: 'http://schema.org/VideoObject' ]

But the itemtype belongs to the video. I don't want to repeat it in every single container-element. I want to be able to use the video partial everywhere else and still have it declared as a video with microdata. So the whole thing has to move out of the article partial and into the vido partial like this:

#app/views/articles/_article.html.haml
%div= render @article.video

#app/views/videos/_video.html.haml
%div[ video ]{ itemprop: 'video', itemscope: true, itemtype: 'http://schema.org/VideoObject' } 

Again, the itemprop has to be on the same element as the video itemtype . But why should the video partial care/know how the itemprop is called that it is the value of?

The only solution I have, is to pass the itemprop into the partial. This also means, we have to declare a default itemprop in case none is passed. So we end up with this:

#app/views/articles/_article.html.haml
%div= render @article.video, itemprop: 'video'

#app/views/videos/_video.html.haml
itemprop ||= nil
%div[ video ]{ itemprop: itemprop, itemscope: true, itemtype: 'http://schema.org/VideoObject' } 

That seems overly complicated. Also I find it quite confusing to pass the name of an the itemprop into the partial, so the partial knows what the itemprop is called that it is the value of. How weird is that? Nowhere else in programming have I encountered objects that needed to know the name of the thing that points to them.

So is there a better established way to do this? Or is that just how it is and I should not not be so whiny about it? ☺

8
  • 3
    Props to such an eloquent question! Sep 5, 2014 at 9:32
  • @RichPeck Yeah, after finishing up I thought, this should have rather been a blogpost instead. But then again, I don't have blog, so, meh. ;)
    – Conkerchen
    Sep 5, 2014 at 9:36
  • 2
    Only problem is people like me want to see a quick question to answer :D It takes a lot of brainpower to work out an answer, less having to work out the original question. Could you possibly add an aside to give us a more succinct question? Sep 5, 2014 at 9:39
  • @RichPeck Put a TL;DR at the top. Hope that helps.
    – Conkerchen
    Sep 5, 2014 at 16:10
  • Why not create a prop model, then you'd be able to do a @article.prop.name, and @article.prop.url (or schema) for example Sep 6, 2014 at 13:36

2 Answers 2

2
+50

Had to read it a couple of times to get the gist of the question. And a good question it is!

TL;DR: Yes you're bitching a bit, but with good right! Use either Decorators or Cells to make it look at feel better but unfortunately there will always need to be a way for the two scopes to interact and the parent-scope to influence the embedded one.

Longer read: Looking at your problem it seems to be mostly based about a problem also common in other areas of programming and it has caused a lot of discussion and grievances within computing (See JavaScript scopes for example). I'm talking about scoping of objects. In this case we're talking about scoping of two elements where one has to behaves different when it is embedded into a parent element.

On a practical level of your problem; you are right that the partial should have the responsibility of providing itemscope and itemtype to the object. This makes most sense to me from an object perspective and is consistent with the top level element the article. I would approach that as the way to look at it. It's the most consistent you could get in this case.

For a solution of providing itemprop in that element when it's embedded; You're solution if passing it from the place it is rendered seems most logical. I do agree this does not look "the ruby way" so I would suggest indeed have a look at either decorators or cells. Both of these can help you clean up your views/partials a lot. As it seems you're into the partial approach cells can offer you an extra layer of controllers inside a view. Very usefull at times.

I like @jfornoff 's suggestion that you create more generic solution that you can also use for items other than just videos. Also there are solutions out there for microformats. Both the microformats helper and Html-schema seem to sort of try and help you in going that way although both are in need of some fresh contributions it seems.

0

I think you are right about being hesitant putting the div-business into the partial, because it does not semantically belong there and you are in trouble in case you want to render the video somewhere else without the div.

So here is what i would propose:

  1. You could look into wrapping the Video-Object (I suppose it is some kind of model) into a decorator and render the div-business there.

  2. You could even make a generic microdata-div-partial, which probably goes about like:

%div [ your-item-type ] { itemprop: propvar, itemscope: true, itemtype: typevar } render item

This is probably syntactically horrible, sorry.

  1. Then you can just render out the div in a decorator method and be independent of how your video is rendered in its own partial.

So its basically: [Controller]

@video.decorate

-> [View]:

@video.render_with_micro

-> [Decorator]: renders microdata-div-partial with @video as item and the given itemprops, itemtypes -> Itemprops, Itemtypes are being maintained within the decorator (which is where they belong IMO, they are representation info).

I hope my braindump helps, Cheers!

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