So at the top of my view I created a little form which will let the user choose a semester and a field:
<%= form_tag '', :method => :get do %>
<%= collection_select(:semester, :semester_id, Semester.all, :id, :name, prompt: true) %>
<%= collection_select(:field, :field_id, Field.all, :id, :name, prompt: true) %>
<%= submit_tag 'Filter' %>
<% end %>
and then the page will generate based on this "filter" to display the subjects with different links. Now for this I am using the following declaration in the Controller:
@betterFilteredLinks = Link.where("semester_id = #{params[:semester][:semester_id].to_i} AND field_id = #{params[:semester][:semester_id].to_i}")
Which is working all fine if I load the page with the filter applied like this:
http://0.0.0.0:3000/?utf8=✓&semester%5Bsemester_id%5D=2&field%5Bfield_id%5D=1&commit=Filter
However if I only load http://0.0.0.0:3000/ it will (naturally) set the params of the filter to nil
and the page will display an error.
I can't think of a solution to this and I'm not sure where to look. I read that I'm not supposed to set default values for the params? Would that even be possible?
Is there a different way to solve this than entering the view with the params already predefined? I believe I might be doing something fundamentally wrong here but I just learned about the forms and params today..
Thanks in advance :)
semester_id
(based on what logic?); or show all - i.e. don't filter by semester; ...dig
likeparams.dig(:semester, :semester_id)
. Butnil.to_i
gives you0
, not sure if you want that. Filtering in the Controller is something I would not recommend, perhaps create a new class calledGradeFilter
, or give it a proper name. And perhaps build your query depending on wether the param is present or not, like@betterFilteredLinks = Link.order(:semester_id)
,@betterFilteredLinks.where(semester_id: semester_id) if semester_id
, you first have to setsemester_id
in your class(you could usedig)
, or passparams[:semester]
to your new class, well, there are many ways.