link_to
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- What's this?
link_to(*args, &block)
public
Creates a link tag of the given name using a URL created by the set of options. See the valid options in the documentation for url_for. It’s also possible to pass a string instead of an options hash to get a link tag that uses the value of the string as the href for the link, or use :back to link to the referrer - a JavaScript back link will be used in place of a referrer if none exists. If nil is passed as a name, the link itself will become the name.
Signatures
link_to(body, url, html_options = {}) # url is a String; you can use URL helpers like # posts_path link_to(body, url_options = {}, html_options = {}) # url_options, except :confirm or :method, # is passed to url_for link_to(options = {}, html_options = {}) do # name end link_to(url, html_options = {}) do # name end
Options
- :confirm => 'question?' - This will allow the unobtrusive JavaScript driver to prompt with the question specified. If the user accepts, the link is processed normally, otherwise no action is taken.
- :method => symbol of HTTP verb - This modifier will dynamically create an HTML form and immediately submit the form for processing using the HTTP verb specified. Useful for having links perform a POST operation in dangerous actions like deleting a record (which search bots can follow while spidering your site). Supported verbs are :post, :delete and :put. Note that if the user has JavaScript disabled, the request will fall back to using GET. If :href => '#' is used and the user has JavaScript disabled clicking the link will have no effect. If you are relying on the POST behavior, you should check for it in your controller’s action by using the request object’s methods for post?, delete? or put?.
- :remote => true - This will allow the unobtrusive JavaScript driver to make an Ajax request to the URL in question instead of following the link. The drivers each provide mechanisms for listening for the completion of the Ajax request and performing JavaScript operations once they’re complete
Examples
Because it relies on url_for, link_to supports both older-style controller/action/id arguments and newer RESTful routes. Current Rails style favors RESTful routes whenever possible, so base your application on resources and use
link_to "Profile", profile_path(@profile) # => <a href="/profiles/1">Profile</a>
or the even pithier
link_to "Profile", @profile # => <a href="/profiles/1">Profile</a>
in place of the older more verbose, non-resource-oriented
link_to "Profile", :controller => "profiles", :action => "show", :id => @profile # => <a href="/profiles/show/1">Profile</a>
Similarly,
link_to "Profiles", profiles_path # => <a href="/profiles">Profiles</a>
is better than
link_to "Profiles", :controller => "profiles" # => <a href="/profiles">Profiles</a>
You can use a block as well if your link target is hard to fit into the name parameter. ERb example:
<%= link_to(@profile) do %> <strong><%= @profile.name %></strong> -- <span>Check it out!</span> <% end %> # => <a href="/profiles/1"> <strong>David</strong> -- <span>Check it out!</span> </a>
Classes and ids for CSS are easy to produce:
link_to "Articles", articles_path, :id => "news", :class => "article" # => <a href="/articles" class="article" id="news">Articles</a>
Be careful when using the older argument style, as an extra literal hash is needed:
link_to "Articles", { :controller => "articles" }, :id => "news", :class => "article" # => <a href="/articles" class="article" id="news">Articles</a>
Leaving the hash off gives the wrong link:
link_to "WRONG!", :controller => "articles", :id => "news", :class => "article" # => <a href="/articles/index/news?class=article">WRONG!</a>
link_to can also produce links with anchors or query strings:
link_to "Comment wall", profile_path(@profile, :anchor => "wall") # => <a href="/profiles/1#wall">Comment wall</a> link_to "Ruby on Rails search", :controller => "searches", :query => "ruby on rails" # => <a href="/searches?query=ruby+on+rails">Ruby on Rails search</a> link_to "Nonsense search", searches_path(:foo => "bar", :baz => "quux") # => <a href="/searches?foo=bar&baz=quux">Nonsense search</a>
The two options specific to link_to (:confirm and :method) are used as follows:
link_to "Visit Other Site", "http://www.rubyonrails.org/", :confirm => "Are you sure?" # => <a href="http://www.rubyonrails.org/" data-confirm="Are you sure?"">Visit Other Site</a> link_to("Destroy", "http://www.example.com", :method => :delete, :confirm => "Are you sure?") # => <a href='http://www.example.com' rel="nofollow" data-method="delete" data-confirm="Are you sure?">Destroy</a>
Link to caller URL
link_to “Back”, :back
Link to same URL with different format
Use params.merge as options. Ex.
<%= link_to "RSS feed", params.merge(:format => :rss), :class => "feed_link" %>
link_to some url with current params
Code example
link_to "some text", users_path(:params => params, :more_params => "more params")
Opening a link in a new window
Use “_blank”, not “_new” to open a link in a new window.
link_to "External link", "http://foo.bar", :target => "_blank" # => <a href="http://foo.bar" target="_blank">External link</a>
Anchor tag in link_to
Code example
link_to("some text", articles_path(:anchor => "comment"))
will output <a href = “/articles#comment” >some text
HTML5 data- attributes using RESTful approach
HTML5 specifies extensible attributes like data-foo=“bar” (or as in Twitter Bootstrap data-toggle=“modal”), which poses two problems for Rails.
First, if you’re using symbol notation in link_to to specify attributes, this fails (dash is not a valid symbol character), so
Invalid!
link_to "Edit", @user, :class => "btn", :data-toggle => "modal"
There are two solutions:
-
put the symbols in quotes,
-
use the special :data hash
Solution 1: Quote Symbols
link_to "Edit", @user, :class => "btn", "data-toggle" => "modal"
Solution 2: Use the :data hash
link_to "Edit", @user, :class => "btn", :data => {:toggle => "modal"}
Resulting HTML
<a href="/users/1" class="btn", data-toggle="modal">Edit</a>
The second is minimally documented, but as a hash, can accept multiple values and is perhaps a little cleaner
link_to with block (Edge Rails)
New ability in Edge Rails to use link_to called with a block, e.g. The following is a view example:
<% link_to some_path do %> <strong>Awesome link</strong> -- it's pretty awesome <% end %>
This change was made in: http://github.com/rails/rails/commit/8190bce8bc7249b7b9f3680195336eb3ca9508ee
Patch in yourself, or likewise you can use the following snippet (which is the new link_to method with modifications [there are also Array extensions on edge to provide .second, .third etc which aren’t present]).
url_helper_extensions.rb
module ActionView module Helpers module UrlHelper def link_to(*args, &block) if block_given? options = args.first || {} html_options = args[1] concat(link_to(capture(&block), options, html_options)) else name = args.first options = args[1] || {} html_options = args[2] url = case options when String options when :back @controller.request.env["HTTP_REFERER"] || 'javascript:history.back()' else self.url_for(options) end if html_options html_options = html_options.stringify_keys href = html_options['href'] convert_options_to_javascript!(html_options, url) tag_options = tag_options(html_options) else tag_options = nil end href_attr = "href=\"#{url}\"" unless href "<a #{href_attr}#{tag_options}>#{name || url}</a>" end end end end end
:confirm, :popup, and :method override :onclick
upplying any combination of :confirm, :popup, and/or :method options to the link_to method results the :onclick option being overridden.
Example:
link_to "Delete", '#', :confirm=>"Are you sure?", :onclick=>"destroyJsFunction()" # expected output # => <a href="#" onclick="if(confirm('Are you sure?')) {destroyJsFunction()}; return false;">Delete</a> # actual output # => <a href="#" onclick="return confirm('Are you sure?');">Delete</a>
Note that the actual output doesn’t include any mention of the “destroyJsFunction()” passed to the link_to method.
Rails 3 will use unobtrusive JavaScript, and I haven’t tested how that will interact with the :onclick option.
Remember to sanitize name
While useful when in need of richer markup inside a link, the name parameter isn’t sanitized or escaped and thus should be escaped when its content can’t be guaranteed to be safe.
E.g.
link_to(url, url)
may cause problems with character entities if url contains ampersands.
Correct usage
link_to(h(url), url)
This applies to all dynamic content.
Expression
You can put some expression too. For example for I18n (using haml on view):
# some_locale.yml
links: contacts: "My contacts"
# index.html.haml
= link_to "#{t "links.contacts"}", :action => 'contacts'
Text and Image together in #link_to
Code Example
link_to “Hello World #{ image_tag(‘web/worl.png’) }”.html_safe, some_path
:method => :delete, etc.
If you’re upgrading to Rails 3 you’ll need to make sure you include rails.js (which is in public/javascripts when you rails new someproject) You’ll need to include it after prototype. And you’ll need to have a 1.7 version of prototype.
When you do a
link_to "Delete", @some_obj, :method => "delete", :confirm => "Are you sure?"
Rails 3 will generate
<a href="some_obj/id" data-confirm="Are you sure?" data-method="delete">Delete</a>
rails.js will creates observers that convert that into a form.
Be aware that this probably won’t work as a link from inside a form (since forms in forms isn’t valid).
link_to with :as routing
The following will not work when your post model is routed with the :as option:
link_to("View post", @post)
Instead, use the helper with your custom name:
link_to("View post", :url => renamedpost_path(@post))
logic in class/id
If you need to place some simple logic in class or like that, I think that best to make it with simple brackets:
Code example
<%= link_to ‘All actions’, switch_action_tab_path, :remote => true, :class => (‘selected’ if @tab == ‘all’) %>
Using fontawesome icons inside link_to
<%= link_to (‘<i class=“fa fa-thumbs-up fa-lg”> </i>’).html_safe, vote_path(@image)%>
in this way you can use thumbs-up icon instead of usual text such as “like” in link_to
Link with relative url
By default link_to opens url as absolute if path does not contain http:// or https:// For Ex.
link_to ‘View’, “test123.abc.com/ag/acf”, target: :_blank, title: “Click to open url in a new tab”
Then it’ll open the link with absolute path not only with test123.abc.com/ag/acf.
If link_to path contains http:// then it takes the relative url.
link_to ‘View’, “http://test123.abc.com/ag/acf”, target: :_blank, title: “Click to open url in a new tab”
Now it open the relative url as it contains.
:popup gotcha in IE
If your popup title contains spaces or escaped HTML characters, Internet Explorer (at least 6/7) will not pop up a new window but open the link in the existing browser window.