361

Suppose I have the following string

@x = "<a href='#'>Turn me into a link</a>"

In my view, I want a link to be displayed. That is, I don't want everything in @x to be unescaped and displayed as a string. What's the difference between using

<%= raw @x %>
<%= h @x %>
<%= @x.html_safe %>

?

1

7 Answers 7

404

Considering Rails 3:

html_safe actually "sets the string" as HTML Safe (it's a little more complicated than that, but it's basically it). This way, you can return HTML Safe strings from helpers or models at will.

h can only be used from within a controller or view, since it's from a helper. It will force the output to be escaped. It's not really deprecated, but you most likely won't use it anymore: the only usage is to "revert" an html_safe declaration, pretty unusual.

Prepending your expression with raw is actually equivalent to calling to_s chained with html_safe on it, but is declared on a helper, just like h, so it can only be used on controllers and views.

"SafeBuffers and Rails 3.0" is a nice explanation on how the SafeBuffers (the class that does the html_safe magic) work.

6
  • 45
    I wouldn't say that h will ever be deprecated. Using "Hi<br/>#{h@ user.name}".html_safe is quite common and an accepted use.
    – maletor
    Jul 19, 2011 at 23:21
  • 1
    @Maletor interesting usage, though I still think it falls into the "unusual" category. Jul 20, 2011 at 14:52
  • 5
    String#html_safe actually returns an instance of ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer which wraps the original string and is #html_safe? . The original string does not become #html_safe? after calling #html_safe on it.
    – jmaxyz
    Apr 13, 2012 at 15:57
  • 10
    Note that there is a subtle difference between raw and html_safe in practice: raw(nil) returns an empty string, while nil.html_safe throws an exception. Aug 12, 2013 at 9:11
  • 2
    h will not "revert" an html_safe declaration. When an string is html_safe, h will do nothing.
    – GuiGS
    May 26, 2014 at 23:30
129

I think it bears repeating: html_safe does not HTML-escape your string. In fact, it will prevent your string from being escaped.

<%= "<script>alert('Hello!')</script>" %>

will put:

&lt;script&gt;alert(&#x27;Hello!&#x27;)&lt;/script&gt;

into your HTML source (yay, so safe!), while:

<%= "<script>alert('Hello!')</script>".html_safe %>

will pop up the alert dialog (are you sure that's what you want?). So you probably don't want to call html_safe on any user-entered strings.

3
  • 109
    In other words, html_safe is not "please make this html safe", it's the opposite - it is you the programmer telling rails that "this string is html safe, promise!" Jan 10, 2014 at 4:50
  • actually I came here to figure out if it actually does unescape or if it just makes a mark that it is not necessary to_escape. Quite a difference. Oh well, off to read the source code then.
    – Simon B.
    Mar 31, 2015 at 12:15
  • 1
    The concept of "html_safe" is just a meta flag on the string. Marking something as html_safe does not escape nor unescape. While the end result of marking something as not HTML safe, and then using the implicit escaping of the ERB <%= tag, might be the same as unescaping data and then re-escaping it on output, functionally it's doing neither. Kind of like the difference of (6 * -1 * -1), vs. 6. Aug 22, 2019 at 18:23
53

The difference is between Rails’ html_safe() and raw(). There is an excellent post by Yehuda Katz on this, and it really boils down to this:

def raw(stringish)

  stringish.to_s.html_safe

end

Yes, raw() is a wrapper around html_safe() that forces the input to String and then calls html_safe() on it. It’s also the case that raw() is a helper in a module whereas html_safe() is a method on the String class which makes a new ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer instance — that has a @dirty flag in it.

Refer to "Rails’ html_safe vs. raw".

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39
  1. html_safe :

    Marks a string as trusted safe. It will be inserted into HTML with no additional escaping performed.

    "<a>Hello</a>".html_safe
    #=> "<a>Hello</a>"
    
    nil.html_safe
    #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `html_safe' for nil:NilClass
    
  2. raw :

    raw is just a wrapper around html_safe. Use raw if there are chances that the string will be nil.

    raw("<a>Hello</a>")
    #=> "<a>Hello</a>"
    
    raw(nil)
    #=> ""
    
  3. h alias for html_escape :

    A utility method for escaping HTML tag characters. Use this method to escape any unsafe content.

    In Rails 3 and above it is used by default so you don't need to use this method explicitly

0
28

The best safe way is: <%= sanitize @x %>

It will avoid XSS!

3

In Simple Rails terms:

h remove html tags into number characters so that rendering won't break your html

html_safe sets a boolean in string so that the string is considered as html save

raw It converts to html_safe to string

1
0

Short and Simple

Let's assume we can't trust user input.

Bad:

user_input.html_safe # asking for trouble

Good:

user_input.html_escape # or

h(user_input) # in some view

Inputs we control:

trusted_input_only.html_safe

that should be fine. but be careful what your trusted inputs are. They must only be generated from your app.

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