Controller action arguments parameterizer for Rails
action_args is a Rails plugin that extends your controller action methods to allow you to specify arguments of interest in the method definition for any action. - in short, this makes your Rails controller Merb-ish.
Having the following controller code:
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def show(id)
@user = User.find id
end
end
When a request visits "/users/777", it calls UsersController#show
passing 777 as the method parameter.
This allows you to explicitly state the most important API for the action -- which members of the params
Hash are used in your controller actions -- in a perfectly natural Ruby way!
Method parameters that you specify are required. If a key of the same name does not exist in the params Hash, ActionContrller::BadRequest is raised.
In this show
action, action_args will require that id
parameter is provided.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
# the `id` parameter is mandatory
def show(id)
@user = User.find id
end
end
Default parameter values are assigned in the standard way. Parameters with a default value will not require a matching item in the params
Hash.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
# the `page` parameter is optional
def index(page = nil)
@users = User.page(page).per(50)
end
end
If you think this Ruby 2.0 syntax reads better, you can choose this style for defining your action methods.
This just works in the same way as :opt
here.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
# the `page` parameter is optional
def index(page: nil)
@users = User.page(page).per(50)
end
end
:keyreq
is the required version of :key
, which was introduced in Ruby 2.1.
You can use this syntax instead of :req
.
class CommentsController < ApplicationController
def create(post_id:, comment:)
post = Post.find post_id
if post.create comment
...
end
end
action_args plays very nice with Rails 4 StrongParameters.
- Inline declaration
Hashes simply respond to the StrongParameters' permit
method.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def create(user)
@user = User.new(user.permit(:name, :age))
...
end
end
- Declarative allow-listing
action_args also provides a declarative permits
method for controller classes.
Use this to keep your permit
calls DRY in a comprehensible way.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
# allow-lists User model's attributes
permits :name, :age
# the given `user` parameter would be automatically permitted by action_args
def create(user)
@user = User.new(user)
end
end
By default, action_args deduces the target model name from the controller name.
For example, the permits
call in UsersController
expects the model name to be User
.
If this is not the case, you can specify the :model_name
option:
class MembersController < ApplicationController
# allow-lists User model's attributes
permits :name, :age, model_name: 'User'
end
action_args works in filters, in the same way as it works in controller actions.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
before_action :set_user, only: :show
def show
end
# `params[:id]` will be dynamically assigned to the method parameter `id` here
private def set_user(id)
@user = User.find(id)
end
end
For those who are familiar with the Rails scaffold's default naming style, you can add _params
suffix to any of the parameter names in the method signatures.
It just matches with the params name without _params
.
For instance, these two actions both pass params[:user]
as the method parameter.
# without _params
def create(user)
@user = User.new(user)
...
end
# with _params
def create(user_params)
@user = User.new(user_params)
...
end
This naming convention makes your controller code look much more compatible with the Rails' default scaffolded code, and so it may be actually super easy for you to manually migrate from the legacy scaffold controller to the action_args style.
action_args provides a custom scaffold controller generator that overwrites the default scaffold generator. Thus, by hitting the scaffold generator command like this:
% rails g scaffold user name age:integer email
The following elegant controller code will be generated:
class UsersController < ApplicationController
permits :name, :age, :email
# GET /users
def index
@users = User.all
end
# GET /users/1
def show(id)
@user = User.find(id)
end
# GET /users/new
def new
@user = User.new
end
# GET /users/1/edit
def edit(id)
@user = User.find(id)
end
# POST /users
def create(user)
@user = User.new(user)
if @user.save
redirect_to @user, notice: 'User was successfully created.'
else
render :new
end
end
# PUT /users/1
def update(id, user)
@user = User.find(id)
if @user.update(user)
redirect_to @user, notice: 'User was successfully updated.'
else
render :edit
end
end
# DELETE /users/1
def destroy(id)
@user = User.find(id)
@user.destroy
redirect_to users_url, notice: 'User was successfully destroyed.'
end
end
You may notice that
- There are no global-ish
params
reference - It's quite easy to comprehend what's the actual input value for each action
- You may be able to write the unit test code without mocking
params
as if the actions are just normal Ruby methods
-
Ruby 2.0.0, 2.1.x, 2.2.x, 2.3.x, 2.4.x, 2.5.x, 2.6.x, 2.7.x, 2.8 (trunk), JRuby, & Rubinius with 2.0+ mode
-
Rails 4.1.x, 4.2.x, 5.0, 5.1, 5.2, 6.0, 6.1 (edge)
For Rails 4.0.x, please use Version 1.5.4.
Bundle the gem to your Rails app by putting this line in your Gemfile:
gem 'action_args'
Of course you still can use both Merb-like style and plain old Rails style action methods even if this plugin is loaded. params
parameter is still alive as well. That means, this plugin won't break any existing controller API.
Each action method parameter name corresponds to params
key name. For example, the following beautifully written nested show
action works perfectly (this might not be a very good example of effective querying, but that's another story).
Rails.application.routes.draw do
resources :authors do
resources :books
end
end
class BooksController < ApplicationController
# GET /authors/:author_id/books/:id
def show(author_id, id)
@book = Author.find(author_id).books.find(id)
end
...
end
You are of course able to specify default values for action parameters such as:
class BooksController < ApplicationController
def index(author_id = nil, page = 1)
...
end
end
However, due to some implementation reasons, the page
variable will be actually defaulted to nil when page
parameter was not given.
In order to provide default parameter values in perfect Ruby manner, we recommend you to use the Ruby 2.0 "keyword arguments" syntax instead.
class BooksController < ApplicationController
def index(author_id: nil, page: 1)
...
end
end
This way, the page
parameter will be defaulted to 1 as everyone might expect.
Copyright (c) 2011- Asakusa.rb. See MIT-LICENSE for further details.