concat
concat(string, binding)
public
The regular puts and print are outlawed in eRuby. It’s recommended to use the <%= "hello" %> form instead of print "hello". If you absolutely must use a method-based output, you can use concat. It’s used like this: <% concat "hello", binding %>. Notice that it doesn’t have an equal sign in front. Using <%= concat "hello" %> would result in a double hello.
helper method to partial
concat can be useful for rendering a block to a partial from a helper:
def block_to_partial(partial_name, options = {}, &block) options.merge!(:body => capture(&block)) concat(render(:partial => partial_name, :locals => options), block.binding) end
This would be particularly useful if you had some partial to help you out with rounded corners, for example. So, in your helper:
def rounded_corners &block block_to_partial("shared/rounded_corners", {}, &block) end
In your view you could have something like:
<% rounded_corners do -%> This text is surrounded by rounded corners <% end -%>
You would have to create some partial in
app/views/shared/rounded_corners.html.erb
And it would look something like:
<div class='c1'> <div class=c2> . . . <%= body -%> </div> </div>
Re: Helper method taking a block
The same using the ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper#content_tag and ActionView::Helpers::CaptureHelper#capture methods:
def render_tree(collection, &block) concat( content_tag(:ul, collection.collect { |item| content_tag(:li, capture(item, &block)) }.join("\n") ), block.binding ) end
The benefit is that it’s easier to improve with html attributes (just add a hash of options to the content_tag call) and it makes just one call to concat (which probably makes it faster).
Helper method taking a block
Following the similar egzample by autonomous, here’s a simpler version when you just need to write a flexible helper method that takes a block.
For example, suppose you have a method that renders a tree:
def render_tree(ary, &block) concat("<ul>", block.binding) for elem in ary concat("<li>", block.binding) yield elem concat("</li>", block.binding) end concat("</ul>", block.binding) end
You can use it in your view, eg:
<% render_tree(@objects) do |elem| -%> <%= elem.title -%> <%= link_to 'delete', elem -%> <% end -%>
that would return for egzample:
<ul> <li> Test title <a href="delete">/elems/1</a> </li> </ul>
Testing concat
To test such helper methods, use the following pattern (a utility method added to your Rspec/unit test suite:
def render_for(root, options = {}) _erbout = '' render_tree(root, options) do |node| _erbout.concat(node.title) end _erbout end
and test like this (RSpec example):
it "should return abc" do render_for(object).should == 'abc' end
Iterate and join blocks
Following LacKac’s idea, we can write render_join (useful to render a collection with a small chunks of code, where a render :partial + :spacer_template would be overkill):
def render_join(collection, join_string, &block) output = collection.collect do |item| capture(item, &block) end.join(join_string) concat(output, block.binding) end
An example of use:
<% render_join(@items, '<br />') do |item| %> <p>Item title: <%= item.title %></p> <% end %>
Binding parameter deprecated in > 2.2
Supplying the binding argument produces a deprecation warning in 2.2 and newer:
DEPRECATION WARNING: The binding argument of #concat is no longer needed. Please remove it from your views and helpers.
Capturing blocks after >2.2
After 2.2, you can omit the do …end block and simply use the &block variable directly:
concat(content_tag(:div, :class => "wrapped_content") do capture(&block) end, block.binding)
becomes simply:
concat(content_tag(:div, capture(&block), :class => "wrapped_content"))