optional local variables in rails partial templates: how do I get out of the (defined? foo) mess?

[亡魂溺海] 提交于 2019-11-26 18:43:19

问题


I've been a bad kid and used the following syntax in my partial templates to set default values for local variables if a value wasn't explicitly defined in the :locals hash when rendering the partial --

<% foo = default_value unless (defined? foo) %>

This seemed to work fine until recently, when (for no reason I could discern) non-passed variables started behaving as if they had been defined to nil (rather than undefined).

As has been pointed by various helpful people on SO, http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Base.html says not to use

defined? foo

and instead to use

local_assigns.has_key? :foo

I'm trying to amend my ways, but that means changing a lot of templates.

Can/should I just charge ahead and make this change in all the templates? Is there any trickiness I need to watch for? How diligently do I need to test each one?


回答1:


I do this:

<% some_local = default_value if local_assigns[:some_local].nil? %>



回答2:


Since local_assigns is a hash, you could also use fetch with the optional default_value.

local_assigns.fetch :foo, default_value

This will return default_value if foo wasn't set.

WARNING:

Be careful with local_assigns.fetch :foo, default_value when default_value is a method, as it will be called anyway in order to pass its result to fetch.

If your default_value is a method, you can wrap it in a block: local_assigns.fetch(:foo) { default_value } to prevent its call when it's not needed.




回答3:


How about

<% foo ||= default_value %>

This says "use foo if it is not nil or true. Otherwise assign default_value to foo"




回答4:


I think this should be repeated here (from http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Base.html):

If you need to find out whether a certain local variable has been assigned a value in a particular render call, you need to use the following pattern:

<% if local_assigns.has_key? :headline %>
  Headline: <%= headline %>
<% end %>

Testing using defined? headline will not work. This is an implementation restriction.




回答5:


In my case, I use:

<% variable ||= "" %>

in my partial.
I don't have idea if that is good but for my is OK




回答6:


I know it's an old thread but here's my small contribution: i would use local_assigns[:foo].presence in a conditional inside the partial. Then i set foo only when needed in the render call:

<%= render 'path/to/my_partial', always_present_local_var: "bar", foo: "baz" %>

Have a look at te official Rails guide here. Valid from RoR 3.1.0.




回答7:


I think a better option that allows for multiple default variables:

<% options = local_assigns.reverse_merge(:include_css => true, :include_js => true) %>
<%= include_stylesheets :national_header_css if options[:include_css] %>
<%= include_javascripts :national_header_js if options[:include_js] %>



回答8:


This is a derivative of Pablo's answer. This allows me to set a default ('full'), and in the end, 'mode' is set in both local_assigns and an actual local variable.

haml/slim:

- mode ||= local_assigns[:mode] = local_assigns.fetch(:mode, 'full')

erb:

<% mode ||= local_assigns[:mode] = local_assigns.fetch(:mode, 'full') %>



回答9:


Ruby 2.5

Erb

It's possible, but you must to declare your default values in the scope.

VARIABLE the word for replacement.

# index.html.erb
...
<%= render 'some_content', VARIABLE: false %>
...

# _some_content.html.erb
...
<% VARIABLE = true if local_assigns[:VARIABLE].nil? %>
<% if VARIABLE %>
    <h1>Do you see me?</h1>
<% end %>
...



回答10:


More intuitive and compact:

<% some_local = default_value unless local_assigns[:some_local] %>




回答11:


If you do not want to pass local variable to partial each time you call it you do this:

<% local_param = defined?(local_param) ? local_param : nil %>

This way you avoid undefined variable error. This will allow you to call your partial with/without local variables.




回答12:


A helper can be created to look like this:

somearg = opt(:somearg) { :defaultvalue }

Implemented like:

module OptHelper
  def opt(name, &block)
    was_assigned, value = eval(
      "[ local_assigns.has_key?(:#{name}), local_assigns[:#{name}] ]", 
      block.binding)
    if was_assigned
      value
    else
      yield
    end
  end
end

See my blog for details on how and why.

Note that this solution does allow you to pass nil or false as the value without it being overridden.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2060561/optional-local-variables-in-rails-partial-templates-how-do-i-get-out-of-the-de

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!