A beautiful rant about PHP … it almost made me cry … all those bad memories … :'(
Tag: Programming
Sortable Columns Across Tables
If you follow Railscast 228 you get sortable table columns for your model. But what if you don’t want to expose the name of the actual database columns or more interesting if you want to sort across tables? Here is how I do it.
In your controller add order or reorder if you already have an order clause in one of the used scopes (default_scope counts too).
class AttendeesController < ApplicationController
def index
@attendances = @conference.attendances.reorder(sort_query).page(params[:page])
end
# ...
end
As I’m using this mechanism in different controllers I added the common functionality to the application_controller.rb file.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
helper_method :navigation_params, :sort_column, :sort_direction
protected
# supports only attendances for now
ALLOWED_SORT_COLUMNS = {
"fee_payed" => "fee_payed",
"fee_payed_on" => "fee_payed_on",
"name" => "users.last_name, users.first_name",
"payment_confirmation_sent_at" => "payment_confirmation_sent_at",
"registered_at" => "registered_at",
"registration_confirmation_sent_at" => "registration_confirmation_sent_at",
"town" => "users.town"
}
# use this in views
def sort_column
ALLOWED_SORT_COLUMNS.keys.include?(params[:sort]) ? params[:sort] : "name"
end
def sort_direction
%w[asc desc].include?(params[:direction]) ? params[:direction] : "asc"
end
def navigation_params
{ direction: params[:direction], page: params[:page], sort: params[:sort] }
end
def sort_query
sort_query_column.split(',').map{ |column| column + ' ' + sort_direction }.join(', ')
end
# use this in controllers
def sort_query_column
ALLOWED_SORT_COLUMNS[sort_column]
end
end
This will use the ALLOWED_SORT_COLUMNS hash to map between user visible and actual database sort columns. Adding sort_query also allows us to sort by multiple columns at once. navigation_params is a shortcut I use when generating URLs (e.g. in link_to) and I want to preserve pagination, sorting, filters/searches, etc. across pages.
def link_to_sortable(column, title = nil)
title ||= column.titleize
sort_icon = column == sort_column ? content_tag(:i, nil, class: (sort_direction == "asc" ? "icon-chevron-down" : "icon-chevron-up")) : ""
direction = column == sort_column && sort_direction == "asc" ? "desc" : "asc"
link_to (title+" "+sort_icon).html_safe, params.merge(sort: column, direction: direction, page: nil)
end
Note that sort_icon assumes you are using Bootstrap.
Now we can have sortable columns in our views:
<%= link_to_sortable "name" %> ...
GoingNative 2012
If you are interested in C++11 and what might come afterwards I advise you to have a look at the conference recordings from this years GoingNative conference. 🙂
I especially liked the day 2 keynote, the STL11 guts and the static if talk. 🙂
Code, Coffee and Baklava
