Bodega

Bodega is a lightweight Rails engine that allows any ActiveRecord::Base subclass to be purchased. It lives seamlessly next to your Rails app, so installation and configuration is simple and fun.

Installation

  1. Add gem 'bodega' to your Gemfile and bundle
  2. Run the install generator: rails generator bodega:install
  3. Route to Bodega, like so:

    MyApp::Application.routes.draw do
      mount Bodega::Engine => 'cart'
    end
    
  4. Profit (literally, for once)

Configuration

Bodega configuration happens inside of config/initializers/bodega.rb. This file is created when you run the installation generator. Configuration is done via a block, like you're used to:

Bodega.config do
  option_name :option_value
  boolean_option_name false
end

Options you can configure

Name Default Description
customer_method :current_user The method on the controller used to associate a customer to an order. Set to nil if you don't want to associate customers to orders.
payment_method :paypal The payment method used to process payments. Currently only Paypal is supported.
test_mode `true` in test or development modes; `false` otherwise Whether or not to process payments in test mode. Useful for development. You can override this if you need to but generally you won't need to.

Sample configuration

Here's an example of how you might configure Bodega:

Bodega.config do
  # We don't associate orders to user / customer records
  customer_method nil
end

if Rails.env.production?
  Bodega.config do
    paypal(
      username: ENV['PAYPAL_USERNAME'],
      password: ENV['PAYPAL_PASSWORD'],
      signature: ENV['PAYPAL_SIGNATURE']
    )
  end
else
  Bodega.config do
    paypal(
      username: '[email protected]',
      password: 'paypal_sandbox_password',
      signature: 'SOME_SIGNATURE_I_GOT_FROM_PAYPAL'
    )
  end
end

Making a model purchasable ("productizing")

Bodega just needs a few database columns and a mixin on a model to make it purchasable. You can do this to models you've already created in your app, or create new product models.

Pre-existing models

For existing models, you need to run the "productize" generator:

  1. rails generate bodega:productize existing_class_name
  2. Add include Bodega::Product to your class definition, so something like this: ruby class User < ActiveRecord::Base include Bodega::Product # etc … end
  3. rake db:migrate

New models

Just generate new models using the "product" generator:

  1. rails generate bodega:product new_class_name
  2. rake db:migrate

Adding an item to the cart

Once you've productized a model, it's trivial to create an "Add to Cart" button for it. Build your controllers and views the way you want, and when you're ready to make, say, a Bucket model purchasable, use the following helper method:

<%= button_to_cart(@bucket) %>

As long as you've correctly productized using the instructions above, this will render a button that adds that instance of Bucket to the cart.

Associating users to orders

Bodega will automatically attempt to use current_user as the Bodega::Order#customer association. If you use a different controller method for accessing the current user / customer / administrator / whatever, just provide it to the config block in your config/initializers/bodega.rb:

Bodega.config do
  customer_method :this_method_returns_the_customer_on_all_controllers
end

If you don't want to associate a customer record, just set it to nil:

Bodega.config do
  customer_method nil
end

Customizing the cart appearance

The philosophy behind Bodega is that you decide on text, and we'll decide on markup. There are three ways to customize the cart's appearance.

HTML & CSS

The cart uses the following markup:

<table id="bodega-cart">
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th class="product-name" colspan="2">Product</th>
      <th class="price">Price</th>
      <th class="total" colspan="2">Total</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td class="quantity-field">
        <input class="quantity" id="products__quantity" max="7" min="1" name="products[][quantity]" type="number" value="1" />
      </td>
      <td class="product-name">
        {{Product Name}}
      </td>
      <td class="price">
        {{Product Price}}
      </td>
      <td class="subtotal">
        {{Total For Product}}
      </td>
      <td class="remove">
        <a href="#">Remove</a>
      </td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>
<button id="bodega-update" type="submit">Update Cart</button>
<button id="bodega-checkout" type="submit">Checkout</button>

This should create ample room for you to style the cart / checkout view as you see fit. Here's an example from WomanNYC:

#bodega-cart {
  border-collapse: collapse;
  border-width: 0;
  width: 100%;
}

#bodega-cart thead {
  border-bottom: 1px solid #ccc;
  text-align: left;
}

#bodega-cart td,
#bodega-cart th {
  font-size: 110%;
  padding: 0.2em 1em 0.2em 0;
}

#bodega-cart .product-name img {
  vertical-align: middle;
  width: 2em;
}

#bodega-cart .quantity-field {
  width: 3em;
}

#bodega-cart .quantity-field input {
  display: inline-block;
  font-size: 110%;
  width: 3em;
}

I18N

Bodega allows you to customize the text labels for the "Product", "Price", and "Total" columns, the "Check Out", "Remove", and "Update Cart" button labels, and the empty cart notification text. Here's an example locale for configuring Bodega:

en:
  bodega:
    product: "Bucket Name"
    price: "Bucket Price"
    total: "Total Price"    
    check_out: "Check Out Now"
    remove: "Remove From Cart"
    update_cart: "Save Cart Changes"
    empty_cart: "You don't have any buckets in your cart yet!"

Decorators

If your product instances respond to a method Product#decorator, which returns a decorator class, Bodega will automatically use that to present your product instead of the direct instance. It does this by following the convention of calling DecoratorClass.decorate(instance). Given the following productized model:

class Deck < ActiveRecord::Base
  include Bodega::Product

  def decorator
    Deckorator
  end
end

Bodega would use Deckorator.decorate(@deck) to use a decorator for the Deck instance. A common pattern in decorators is something like the following:

class Deckorator
  attr_accessor :product

  class << self
    def decorate(products)
      if products.respond_to?(:each)
        products.map { |product| new(product) }
      else
        new(products)
      end
    end
  end

  def initialize(product)
    self.product = product
  end

  def name
    %[<img alt="#{product.name}" src="#{photo.url(:thumb)}" /> #{artist.name}: #{product.name}].html_safe
  end

  protected
  def method_missing(method, *args)
    product.send(method, *args)
  end
end

Use this to provide Bodega-specific labels for products which are being purchased.