I'm creating a helper to be used by Formtastic but I get the undefined local variable or method
error. I don't know where to put it so it can work.
I already tried in the application_helper.rb and in app/helpers/active_admin/view_helpers.rb
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I'm creating a helper to be used by Formtastic but I get the undefined local variable or method
error. I don't know where to put it so it can work.
I already tried in the application_helper.rb and in app/helpers/active_admin/view_helpers.rb
You can define them in app/helpers/ as you tried but you need to include them trough the active admin's initializer like this:
# in config/initializers/active_admin.rb
ActiveAdmin.setup do |config|
....
end
module ActiveAdmin::ViewHelpers
include ApplicationHelper
end
You need to put your helper functions in app/helpers/active_admin/views_helper.rb
file
Example:
module ActiveAdmin::ViewsHelper #camelized file name
def my_helper
# do something
end
end
controller do include ActiveAdmin::ViewsHelper end
collection_action :my_action do render json: my_helper end
– Lev Lukomsky
Nov 19 '15 at 22:44
What I have found using ActiveAdmin 0.6.1 is that ActiveAdmin will look for helpers in app/helpers/active_admin/*_helper.rb, but the name doesn't really matter.
What does matter is:
If anyone knows where this is officially documented, that would be awesome.
Here is an example: https://gist.github.com/afred/7035a657e8ec5ec08d3b
app/helpers/active_admin/view_helpers.rb
didn't help me
EDITED: i changed it to views_helper.rb & ViewsHelper accordingly and it worked
*but if you want to define it only for certain resource, you can do it in my way
i had to define
#app/helpers/active_admin/categories_helper.rb
module ActiveAdmin::CategoriesHelper
def helper_method
end
end
for my active_admin resource app/admin/categories.rb
I can make it work in ActiveAdmin 0.6.1 (finally!). The solution is to create a helper module as following:
# app/helpers/active_admin_helpers.rb
module ActiveAdminHelpers
# make this method public (compulsory)
def self.included(dsl)
# nothing ...
end
# define helper methods here ...
def helper_method
...
end
end
then include this module this way:
# app/admin/[resource].rb
include ActiveAdminHelpers
ActiveAdmin.register [Resource] do
...
end
Actually, it's not a nice solution but it's DRY and working good. I have already read and tried a lot of methods and solutions such as ViewHelpers module (put under 'app/helpers' or 'app/admin/active_admin'), ActiveAdmin::DSL monkey patching, ... but those never worked in version 0.6.1 (I don't have any ideas about other versions) :(
ActiveAdminHelpers
in Object
, at the top level. That means that once this file loads, those helper methods are available on every object in the entire application.
– Peeja
Mar 19 '14 at 14:59
Another way to do this is to make the specific ActiveAdmin controller generated behind-the-scenes include the helper. This method will allow making the inclusion of the helpers explicit per file rather than global.
ActiveAdmin.register MyModel do
controller do
include MyHelper
end
end
Defining ActiveAdmin::ViewHelpers
in app/admin/active_admin/view_helpers.rb
works for me with activeadmin 0.3.4
and 0.5.0
.
Using activeadmin 1.0.0.pre1 from git://github.com/activeadmin/activeadmin.git
Rails 4.2.1
This worked for me...
my_app/app/helpers/active_admin/resources_helper.rb
module ActiveAdmin
module ResourcesHelper
def resource_form_for(_resource, _params, _options = {}, &_block)
url = if _resource.new_record?
UrlBuilder.resources_path(_resource.class, _params)
else
UrlBuilder.resource_path(_resource.class, _params)
end
method = _resource.new_record? ? :post : :put
options = { url: url, method: method, builder: ActiveAdmin::FormBuilder }
options.merge!(_options)
semantic_form_for([:admin, _resource], options) do |f|
_block.call(f)
end
end
end
end
my_app/app/admin/balance_sheets.rb
ActiveAdmin.register BalanceSheet do
form partial: 'form'
end
my_app/app/views/admin/balance_sheets/_form.html.erb
<%= resource_form_for(resource, params) do |f| %>
<%= f.inputs "Fields" do %>
<%= f.input :progress_status %>
<%= f.input :crew %>
<%= f.input :shift %>
<%= f.input :expected_progress %>
<%= f.input :real_progress %>
<%= f.input :analyst, collection: User.analysts %>
<%= f.input :activity_ids, as: :check_boxes, collection: Activity.balance_sheet_activities %>
<%= f.input :worker_ids, as: :check_boxes, collection: Worker.all %>
<% end %>
<%= f.actions %>
<% end %>
You can also use ActiveAdmin partials :
render partial: 'admin/my_partial', locals: { var: my_var }
And inside app/views/admin/_my_partial.html.arb
your active_admin ruby code.
What worked for me with Rails 3.2.11 and and gem activeadmin (0.5.1) was not adding the app/active_admin/view_helpers.rb file, or declaring any modules in config/initializers/active_admin.rb
I put my helpers logically, by model, into the app/*_helpers.rb files. Then inside the app/admin/model.rb file I used:
# app/admin/[resource].rb
ActiveAdmin.register [Resource] do
...
filter :gender, as: :select, collection: proc{genders}
...
end
To use the helper in filters, to display a drop down list of genders to filter on, in the list view. For the corresponding create form fields, I used:
# app/admin/[resource].rb
ActiveAdmin.register [Resource] do
form do |f|
f.inputs "Case Manager" do
...
f.input :gender, as: :radio, collection: genders
...
f.buttons
end
end
end
To display radio buttons for the input form.
Not sure why the proc{}
is required outside of the form do |f|
block, but if anyone can explain why it's a bad idea, I'll find a different way.
ApplicationHelper
is automatically loaded, but I needed to restart my application for any new helpers to be detected by ActiveAdmin – Besi Mar 5 '18 at 12:23