5

I have a very simple requirement - I have a layout comprising of a header and body. It is a sub-layout of the page, not for the page itself.

This layout is repeated throughout multiple pages, and it is possible the structure around it will change. So I want to be able to separate the content of the header and the content of the body from the structure that contains it.

My first attempt was to use render a partial as a layout that used named yields to render a header and body:

<header class="Resource-header">
  <%= yield :resource_header %>
</header>
<div class="Resource-body">
  <%= yield :resource_body %>
</div>

Then render it from my templates like this:

<%= render layout: 'admin/resource' do %>

  <% content_for :resource_header do %>
  <% end %>

  <% content_for :resource_body do %>
  <% end %>

<% end %>

However, this renders nothing.

I started playing with the order of things, and discovered that if the content_for blocks are declared before the call to the partial, this approach does work:

<% content_for :resource_header do %>
<% end %>

<% content_for :resource_body do %>
<% end %>

<%= render layout: 'admin/resource' do %><% end %>

However this just feels incredibly hacky. It seems that content_for is scoped globally, and there is no association between the content_for block and the partial rendering.

So what is the correct way for me to achieve this?

3 Answers 3

1

I just happened to have exactly same problem.

Solution is: in your partial layout file 'admin/resource' body:

<header class="Resource-header">
  <%= yield resource, :resource_header %>
</header>
<div class="Resource-body">
  <%= yield resource, :resource_body %>
</div>

in your templates do:

<%= render layout: 'admin/resource' do |resource, section| %>
  <% case section %>
    <% when :resource_header %>
      Resource header shows here.
    <% when :resource_body %>
      Resource body shows here.
  <% end %>

<% end %>
1
  • is this a formal way?
    – Hui-Yu Lee
    May 12, 2020 at 8:49
0

Take a look on rails presenters https://www.ruby-toolbox.com/categories/rails_presenters Maybe your solution is cells gem.

0

Eventhough the question is quite old now, I had a similar issue today. I came up with sth. like this. No gem or custom class required, just some fancy block usage ;)

<!-- app/views/layouts/fancy-blocks.html.erb -->
<%
  body, footer = nil
  yield(
    proc {|&blk| body = capture(&blk) },
    proc {|&blk| footer = capture(&blk) }
  )
%>
<section class="body"><%= body %></section>
<footer><%= footer %></footer>
<!-- app/views/some-other/view.html.erb -->
<%= render 'layout/fancy-blocks' do |body, footer| %>
  <% body.call do %>
    BODY
  <% end %>

  <% footer.call do %>
    FOOTER
  <% end %>
<% end %>

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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