SmartListing helps creating AJAX-enabled lists of ActiveRecord collections or arrays with pagination, filtering, sorting and in-place editing.
Add to your Gemfile:
gem "smart_listing"
Then run:
$ bundle install
Also, you need to add SmartListing to your asset pipeline:
//= require smart_listing
Rails >= 5.1 users: Rails 5.1 has dropped jQuery dependency from the default stack in favour of rails-ujs
. SmartListing still requires jQuery so make sure that you use jquery_ujs
from jquery-rails
gem and have following requires in your asset pipeline before smart_listing
:
//= require jquery
//= require jquery_ujs
Optionally you can also install some configuration initializer:
$ rails generate smart_listing:install
It will be placed in config/initializers/smart_listing.rb
and will allow you to tweak some configuration settings like HTML classes and data attributes names.
SmartListing comes with some built-in views which are by default compatible with Bootstrap 3. You can easily change them after installing:
$ rails generate smart_listing:views
Files will be placed in app/views/smart_listing
.
Let's start with a controller. In order to use SmartListing, in most cases you need to include controller extensions and SmartListing helper methods:
include SmartListing::Helper::ControllerExtensions
helper SmartListing::Helper
Next, put following code in controller action you desire:
@users = smart_listing_create(:users, User.active, partial: "users/listing")
This will create SmartListing named :users
consisting of ActiveRecord scope User.active
elements and rendered by partial users/listing
. You can also use arrays instead of ActiveRecord collections. Just put array: true
option just like for Pagy.
In the main view (typically something like index.html.erb
or index.html.haml
), use this method to render listing:
smart_listing_render(:users)
smart_listing_render
does some magic and renders users/listing
partial which may look like this (in HAML):
- unless smart_listing.empty?
%table
%thead
%tr
%th User name
%th Email
%tbody
- smart_listing.collection.each do |user|
%tr
%td= user.name
%td= user.email
= smart_listing.paginate
- else
%p.warning No records!
You can see that listing template has access to special smart_listing
local variable which is basically an instance of SmartListing::Helper::Builder
. It provides you with some helper methods that ease rendering of SmartListing:
Builder#paginate
- renders Pagy pagination,Builder#pagination_per_page_links
- display some link that allow you to customize Pagy'sper_page
,Builder#collection
- accesses underlying list of items,Builder#empty?
- checks if collection is empty,Builder#count
- returns collection count,Builder#render
- basic template'srender
wrapper that automatically addssmart_listing
local variable,
There are also other methods that will be described in detail below.
If you are using SmartListing with AJAX on (by default), one last thing required to make pagination (and other features) work is to create JS template for main view (typically something like index.js.erb
):
<%= smart_listing_update(:users) %>
SmartListing supports two modes of sorting: implicit and explicit. Implicit mode is enabled by default. In this mode, you define sort columns directly in the view:
- unless smart_listing.empty?
%table
%thead
%tr
%th= smart_listing.sortable "User name", :name
%th= smart_listing.sortable "Email", :email
%tbody
- smart_listing.collection.each do |user|
%tr
%td= user.name
%td= user.email
= smart_listing.paginate
- else
%p.warning No records!
In this case :name
and :email
are sorting column names. Builder#sortable
renders special link containing column name and sort order (either asc
, desc
, or empty value).
You can also specify default sort order in the controller:
@users = smart_listing_create(:users, User.active, partial: "users/listing", default_sort: {name: "asc"})
Implicit mode is convenient with simple data sets. In case you want to sort by joined column names, we advise you to use explicit sorting:
@users = smart_listing_create :users, User.active.joins(:stats), partial: "users/listing",
sort_attributes: [[:last_signin, "stats.last_signin_at"]],
default_sort: {last_signin: "desc"}
Note that :sort_attributes
are array which of course means, that order of attributes matters.
There's also a possibility to specify available sort directions using :sort_dirs
option which is by default [nil, "asc", "desc"]
.
In order to allow managing and editing list items, we need to reorganize our views a bit. Basically, each item needs to have its own partial:
- unless smart_listing.empty?
%table
%thead
%tr
%th= smart_listing.sortable "User name", "name"
%th= smart_listing.sortable "Email", "email"
%th
%tbody
- smart_listing.collection.each do |user|
%tr.editable{data: {id: user.id}}
= smart_listing.render partial: 'users/user', locals: {user: user}
= smart_listing.item_new colspan: 3, link: new_user_path
= smart_listing.paginate
- else
%p.warning No records!
<tr>
has now editable
class and data-id
attribute. These are essential to make it work. We've used also a new helper: Builder#new_item
. It renders new row which is used for adding new items. :link
needs to be valid url to new resource action which renders JS:
<%= smart_listing_item :users, :new, @new_user, "users/form" %>
Note that new
action does not need to create SmartListing (via smart_listing_create
). It just initializes @new_user
and renders JS view.
New partial for user (users/user
) may look like this:
%td= user.name
%td= user.email
%td.actions= smart_listing_item_actions [{name: :show, url: user_path(user)}, {name: :edit, url: edit_user_path(user)}, {name: :destroy, url: user_path(user)}]
smart_listing_item_actions
renders here links that allow to edit and destroy user item. :show
, :edit
and :destroy
are built-in actions, you can also define your :custom
actions. Again. <td>
's class actions
is important.
Controller actions referenced by above urls are again plain Ruby on Rails actions that render JS like:
<%= smart_listing_item :users, :new, @user, "users/form" %>
<%= smart_listing_item :users, :edit, @user, "users/form" %>
<%= smart_listing_item :users, :destroy, @user %>
Partial name supplied to smart_listing_item
(users/form
) references @user
as object
and may look like this:
%td{colspan: 3}
- if object.persisted?
%p Edit user
- else
%p Add user
= form_for object, url: object.new_record? ? users_path : user_path(object), remote: true do |f|
%p
Name:
= f.text_field :name
%p
Email:
= f.text_field :email
%p= f.submit "Save"
And one last thing are create
and update
controller actions JS view:
<%= smart_listing_item :users, :create, @user, @user.persisted? ? "users/user" : "users/form" %>
<%= smart_listing_item :users, :update, @user, @user.valid? ? "users/user" : "users/form" %>
SmartListing controls allow you to change somehow presented data. This is typically used for filtering records. Let's see how view with controls may look like:
= smart_listing_controls_for(:users) do
.filter.input-append
= text_field_tag :filter, '', class: "search", placeholder: "Type name here", autocomplete: "off"
%button.btn.disabled{type: "submit"}
%span.glyphicon.glyphicon-search
This gives you nice Bootstrap-enabled filter field with keychange handler. Of course you can use any other form fields in controls too.
When form field changes its value, form is submitted and request is made. This needs to be handled in controller:
users_scope = User.active.joins(:stats)
users_scope = users_scope.like(params[:filter]) if params[:filter]
@users = smart_listing_create :users, users_scope, partial: "users/listing"
Then, JS view is rendered and your SmartListing updated. That's it!
You don't need to create all the JS views in case you want to simply use one SmartListing per controller. Just use helper methods without their first attribute (name) ie. smart_listing_create(User.active, partial: "users/listing")
. Then define two helper methods:
smart_listing_resource
returning single object,smart_listing_collection
returning collection of objects.
SmartListing default views will user these methods to render your list properly.
Apart from standard SmartListing initializer, you can also define custom config profiles. In order to do this, use following syntax:
SmartListing.configure(:awesome_profile) do |config|
# put your definitions here
end
In order to use this profile, create helper method named smart_listing_config_profile
returning profile name and put into your JS SmartListing.config.merge()
function call. merge()
function expects parameter with config attributes hash or reads body data-attribute named smart-listing-config
. Hash of config attributes can be obtained by using helper method SmartListing.config(:awesome_profile).to_json
.
For more information and some use cases, see the Showcase
SmartListing uses great pagination gem Pagy https://github.com/ddnexus/pagy
Created by Sology http://www.sology.eu
Initial development sponsored by Smart Language Apps Limited http://smartlanguageapps.com/