Module: ActionView::Helpers::JavaScriptHelper
- Includes:
- PrototypeHelper
- Included in:
- ActionView::Helpers, UrlHelper
- Defined in:
- lib/action_view/helpers/javascript_helper.rb
Overview
Provides functionality for working with JavaScript in your views.
Ajax, controls and visual effects
-
For information on using Ajax, see ActionView::Helpers::PrototypeHelper.
-
For information on using controls and visual effects, see ActionView::Helpers::ScriptaculousHelper.
Including the JavaScript libraries into your pages
Rails includes the Prototype JavaScript framework and the Scriptaculous JavaScript controls and visual effects library. If you wish to use these libraries and their helpers (ActionView::Helpers::PrototypeHelper and ActionView::Helpers::ScriptaculousHelper), you must do one of the following:
-
Use
<%= javascript_include_tag :defaults %>in the HEAD section of your page (recommended): This function will return references to the JavaScript files created by therailscommand in yourpublic/javascriptsdirectory. Using it is recommended as the browser can then cache the libraries instead of fetching all the functions anew on every request. -
Use
<%= javascript_include_tag 'prototype' %>: As above, but will only include the Prototype core library, which means you are able to use all basic AJAX functionality. For the Scriptaculous-based JavaScript helpers, like visual effects, autocompletion, drag and drop and so on, you should use the method described above.
For documentation on javascript_include_tag see ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper.
Constant Summary collapse
- JAVASCRIPT_PATH =
File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), 'javascripts')
- JS_ESCAPE_MAP =
{ '\\' => '\\\\', '</' => '<\/', "\r\n" => '\n', "\n" => '\n', "\r" => '\n', '"' => '\\"', "'" => "\\'" }
Constants included from PrototypeHelper
PrototypeHelper::AJAX_OPTIONS, PrototypeHelper::CALLBACKS
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#button_to_function(name, *args, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns a button with the given
nametext that’ll trigger a JavaScriptfunctionusing the onclick handler. -
#escape_javascript(javascript) ⇒ Object
Escape carrier returns and single and double quotes for JavaScript segments.
-
#javascript_cdata_section(content) ⇒ Object
:nodoc:.
-
#javascript_tag(content_or_options_with_block = nil, html_options = {}, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns a JavaScript tag with the
contentinside. -
#link_to_function(name, *args, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns a link of the given
namethat will trigger a JavaScriptfunctionusing the onclick handler and return false after the fact.
Methods included from PrototypeHelper
#button_to_remote, #evaluate_remote_response, #form_remote_tag, #link_to_remote, #observe_field, #observe_form, #periodically_call_remote, #remote_form_for, #remote_function, #submit_to_remote, #update_page, #update_page_tag
Instance Method Details
#button_to_function(name, *args, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns a button with the given name text that’ll trigger a JavaScript function using the onclick handler.
The first argument name is used as the button’s value or display text.
The next arguments are optional and may include the javascript function definition and a hash of html_options.
The function argument can be omitted in favor of an update_page block, which evaluates to a string when the template is rendered (instead of making an Ajax request first).
The html_options will accept a hash of html attributes for the link tag. Some examples are :class => “nav_button”, :id => “articles_nav_button”
Note: if you choose to specify the javascript function in a block, but would like to pass html_options, set the function parameter to nil
Examples:
"Greeting", "alert('Hello world!')"
"Delete", "if (confirm('Really?')) do_delete()"
"Details" do |page|
page[:details].visual_effect :toggle_slide
end
"Details", :class => "details_button" do |page|
page[:details].visual_effect :toggle_slide
end
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/javascript_helper.rb', line 122 def (name, *args, &block) = args..symbolize_keys function = block_given? ? update_page(&block) : args[0] || '' onclick = "#{"#{html_options[:onclick]}; " if html_options[:onclick]}#{function};" tag(:input, .merge(:type => 'button', :value => name, :onclick => onclick)) end |
#escape_javascript(javascript) ⇒ Object
Escape carrier returns and single and double quotes for JavaScript segments.
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/javascript_helper.rb', line 141 def escape_javascript(javascript) if javascript javascript.gsub(/(\\|<\/|\r\n|[\n\r"'])/) { JS_ESCAPE_MAP[$1] } else '' end end |
#javascript_cdata_section(content) ⇒ Object
:nodoc:
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/javascript_helper.rb', line 186 def javascript_cdata_section(content) #:nodoc: "\n//#{cdata_section("\n#{content}\n//")}\n".html_safe end |
#javascript_tag(content_or_options_with_block = nil, html_options = {}, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns a JavaScript tag with the content inside. Example:
javascript_tag "alert('All is good')"
Returns:
<script type="text/javascript">
//<![CDATA[
alert('All is good')
//]]>
</script>
html_options may be a hash of attributes for the <script> tag. Example:
javascript_tag "alert('All is good')", :defer => 'defer'
# => <script defer="defer" type="text/javascript">alert('All is good')</script>
Instead of passing the content as an argument, you can also use a block in which case, you pass your html_options as the first parameter.
<% javascript_tag :defer => 'defer' do -%>
alert('All is good')
<% end -%>
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/javascript_helper.rb', line 168 def javascript_tag( = nil, = {}, &block) content = if block_given? = if .is_a?(Hash) capture(&block) else end tag = content_tag(:script, javascript_cdata_section(content), .merge(:type => Mime::JS)) if block_called_from_erb?(block) concat(tag) else tag end end |
#link_to_function(name, *args, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns a link of the given name that will trigger a JavaScript function using the onclick handler and return false after the fact.
The first argument name is used as the link text.
The next arguments are optional and may include the javascript function definition and a hash of html_options.
The function argument can be omitted in favor of an update_page block, which evaluates to a string when the template is rendered (instead of making an Ajax request first).
The html_options will accept a hash of html attributes for the link tag. Some examples are :class => “nav_button”, :id => “articles_nav_button”
Note: if you choose to specify the javascript function in a block, but would like to pass html_options, set the function parameter to nil
Examples:
link_to_function "Greeting", "alert('Hello world!')"
Produces:
<a onclick="alert('Hello world!'); return false;" href="#">Greeting</a>
link_to_function(image_tag("delete"), "if (confirm('Really?')) do_delete()")
Produces:
<a onclick="if (confirm('Really?')) do_delete(); return false;" href="#">
<img src="/images/delete.png?" alt="Delete"/>
</a>
link_to_function("Show me more", nil, :id => "more_link") do |page|
page[:details].visual_effect :toggle_blind
page[:more_link].replace_html "Show me less"
end
Produces:
<a href="#" id="more_link" onclick="try {
$("details").visualEffect("toggle_blind");
$("more_link").update("Show me less");
}
catch (e) {
alert('RJS error:\n\n' + e.toString());
alert('$(\"details\").visualEffect(\"toggle_blind\");
\n$(\"more_link\").update(\"Show me less\");');
throw e
};
return false;">Show me more</a>
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/javascript_helper.rb', line 88 def link_to_function(name, *args, &block) = args..symbolize_keys function = block_given? ? update_page(&block) : args[0] || '' onclick = "#{"#{html_options[:onclick]}; " if html_options[:onclick]}#{function}; return false;" href = [:href] || '#' content_tag(:a, name, .merge(:href => href, :onclick => onclick)) end |