CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2012/ch1b 1w64 nn: Difference between revisions
Line 78: | Line 78: | ||
<td><%= movie.title %></td> | <td><%= movie.title %></td> | ||
<td><%= movie.description %></td> | <td><%= movie.description %></td> | ||
<td><%= link_to 'Show', movie %></td> | <td><%= link_to 'Show', movie_path(movie) %></td> | ||
<td><%= link_to 'Edit', edit_movie_path(movie) %></td> | <td><%= link_to 'Edit', edit_movie_path(movie) %></td> | ||
<td><%= link_to 'Remove', movie, :confirm => 'Are you sure?', :method => :delete %></td> | <td><%= link_to 'Remove', movie, :confirm => 'Are you sure?', :method => :delete %></td> |
Revision as of 01:40, 3 October 2012
SaaS - 3.12 Controller and views
Coursera is a technology company that provides free online education by making videos. SaaS is one such video series made by University of California, Berkley.
Introduction
This article focuses on the concepts and usage of controllers and views in Rails application which is available as one of the SaaS video lectures. It covers the general information on model, view and controllers in a Rails application.
MVC responsibilities
In Rails, applications are broken into three types of components: models, views, and controllers.
- Model: Application's state is maintained by models. It not only stores the state of the application in databases but also imposes business rules on that data. It contains methods to get/manipulate data. Different methods are provided by ActiveRecord to do that. An example is shown below.
class Movie < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :genre has_many :actor def find_movie_name(movie_id) if movie_id then movie = Movie.find_by_id(movie_id) return movie.name end end
- Controller: In REST applications, the controller acts as a middle man to synchronize the communication between model and view. It is responsible for receiving request from the user, getting data from the model and making it available to the view for displaying data to the user. Controllers are also responsible for routing the requests to internal actions. This is facilitated by helper methods. An example is shown below.
class MoviesController < ApplicationController def show @movie = Movie.find(params[:id]) end end
Here params is the parameter from the request that is parsed out by the routing subsystem. This contains the id of the movie that the user wants to find which can be fetched by calling movie.find. In a real application this is unsafe and must be handled by an exception since params[:id] can happen to be a non-existing value and will result in an error. Finally the instance variable @movie in the controller is going to be available to the view.
- View: Views are responsible for creating response in the browser to display data and allow user interaction. In the above example Show is going to display the details of a movie (genre, actors). To select the view for the rendering step, the default action the rails will take is, to find a view whose directory name matches the name of its class which is movies and finally matches the name of that particular action i.e show. Thus the view for the above action can be found in app/view/movies/show.html.erb. Here ERb ( Embedded Ruby) is used to generate dynamic content in Rails application.
Adding a new controller action to Rails application
In Rails controller forms the logical center of the application. Controller is essentially a Ruby class is inherited from ActionController super class. To create a controller, these steps must be followed.
- Add the action method in the appropriate app/controllers/*_controller.rb. This method will have the actual code to do whatever the action is meant to do. For example,
class MoviesController < ApplicationController def new end end
Here the new function creates an instance of Movies controller.
- Create a route in config/routes.rb. When the application receives a request from the user, it is this route that determines the appropriate controller and action to run. Example of a route in routes.rb
match 'movies/new' => 'movies#new'
- Ensure there is something for the action to render in app/views/model/action.html.erb. Every trip through the controller has to end with returning something to the view. Even if there is no explicit render at the end of controller, by default, Rails looks for that particular action in the app/view/model. For example, the controller shown below has an index method as follows:
class MoviesController < ApplicationController def index @movies = Movie.all end end
The view for this controller will be found in app/view/movie/index.html.erb. It is shown below as follows:
<h1>Listing Movies</h1> <table> <tr> <th>Title</th> <th>Description</th> <th></th> <th></th> <th></th> </tr> <% @movies.each do |movie| %> <tr> <td><%= movie.title %></td> <td><%= movie.description %></td> <td><%= link_to 'Show', movie_path(movie) %></td> <td><%= link_to 'Edit', edit_movie_path(movie) %></td> <td><%= link_to 'Remove', movie, :confirm => 'Are you sure?', :method => :delete %></td> </tr> <% end %> </table> <br /> <%= link_to 'New movie', new_movie_path %>
URI helpers
The routing subsystem that maps the URI to different controller actions also provides helper methods that generates routes in the context of that page. These routes generated by helper classes is used by the user in the views to navigate from one page to another.
Helper method | URI returned | RESTful route | Action |
---|---|---|---|
movies_path | /movies | GET /movies | index |
movies_path | /movies | POST /movies | create |
new_movie_path | /movies/new | GET /movies/new | new |
edit_movie_path(m) | /movies/1/edit | GET /movies/:id/edit | edit |
movie_path(m) | /movies/1 | GET /movies/:id | show |
movie_path(m) | /movies/1 | PUT /movies/:id | update |
movie_path(m) | /movies/1 | DELETE /movies/:id | destroy |
Just like the routing subsystem allows us to map http methods and URI's to different control actions, the same routing subsystem also sets up these helpful methods that will generate the routes in the context of the page. Example when we are looking at the list of all movies index.index.html.haml, somewhere on that page there will be a link whose argument is movie_path with an argument.
link_to movie_path(3)
movie_path is the helper that set up and gives back a route to the show action for that movie id. So when the user clicks on it, the URI that is going to be generated is going to be movie/:id with a GET method because its a link. This is how it looks in the actual html.
<a href="/movies/3">...</a>
From here, once the URI is hit, that is going to get looked up in the routing subsystem. /movies/something matches the show action of the movies controller and it will take the wild card thing :id and puts that in params[:id]
GET /movies/:id {:action=>"show", :controller=>"movies"} params[:id]
With that appropriate controller action is called
def show @movie = Movie.find(params[:id]) end
Here the controller action can reasonably expect to find that params[:id] will be whatever this route said that it should match. We can let the user return a list of all movies. We can use RESTful URI helpers. Here it is the index action. movies_path with no arguments links to the index action. The line to add on show template is
link_to 'Back to List', movies_path
Back to List is the text that is click-able and movies_path is a method call. As the app gets more complicate, these mechanism scale very nicely