Develop rails applications at the speed of thought. Warped is a collection of tools and utilities that make it easier to develop rails applications.
Install the gem and add to the Rails application's Gemfile by executing:
$ bundle add warped
Then run the generator to create the configuration file:
$ rails generate warped:install
The generator will create a file at config/initializers/warped.rb
with the default configuration.
For using the views provided by the gem, your app will need to have the following:
- rails/importmap-rails configured
- hotwired/stimulus-rails configured
Add the following to your config/importmap.rb
:
pin_all_from "app/javascript/controllers/warped", under: "controllers/warped"
This will import all the stimulus controllers provided by the gem.
Add the following to your app/javascript/controllers/index.js
, bellow the eagerLoadControllersFrom("controllers", application)
line:
eagerLoadControllersFrom("warped/controllers", application)
Include the css provided by the gem in your app/views/layouts/application.html.erb
:
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "warped/base" %>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "warped/table" %>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "warped/search" %>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "warped/filters" %>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "warped/pagination" %>
Warped provides utilities for making it easier to develop rails applications. The utilities are organized into modules and can be used by including the module in the class that needs the utility. The utilities are organized in concepts used by most rails applications:
The Warped::Controllers
module defines five concerns that can be included in a controller to provide additional functionality:
- Warped::Controllers::Filterable
- Warped::Controllers::Searchable
- Warped::Controllers::Sortable
- Warped::Controllers::Paginatable
- Warped::Controllers::Tabulatable
The Filterable
concern provides a method to filter the records in a controller's action.
The method filterable_by
is used to define the filterable fields and the filter method to use.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Warped::Controllers::Filterable
filterable_by :name, :email, :created_at
def index
users = filter(User.all)
render json: users
end
end
The filter
method will use the query parameters to filter the records. For example, to filter the users by name, email, and created_at, the following query parameters can be used:
GET /users?name=John
GET /users?email=john@example.com
GET /users?created_at=2021-01-01
Tip
It's highly recommended to use the type-safe filter methods provided by the gem. This prevents invalid queries from being executed on the database. See the Filterable documentation for more information.
Complete documentation for Warped::Controllers::Filterable.
The Searchable
concern provides a method to search the records in a controller's action.
By default it calls the scope search
on the model, and uses the query parameter q
to search the records.
# app/models/user.rb
class User < ApplicationRecord
# You can define your own search scope and use standard sql
# scope :search, ->(query) { where('name LIKE ?', "%#{query}%") }
# Or use pg_search
include PgSearch::Model
pg_search_scope :search, against: [:name, :email]
end
# app/controllers/users_controller.rb
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Warped::Controllers::Searchable
def index
users = search(User.all)
render json: users
end
end
Request examples:
GET /users?q=John
# calls #search(User.all, search_term: 'John', model_search_scope: :search) in the controller
Complete documentation for Warped::Controllers::Searchable.
The Sortable
concern provides a method to sort the records in a controller's action.
The method sortable_by
is used to define the sortable fields.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Warped::Controllers::Sortable
sortable_by :name, :created_at
def index
users = sort(User.all)
render json: users
end
end
Tip
It's highly recommended to use the type-safe sort methods provided by the gem. This prevents invalid queries from being executed on the database. See the Sortable documentation for more information.
This will use the query parameter sort_key
and sort_direction
to sort the records.
- The default sort direction is
desc
. - The default sort key is
:id
.
Example requests:
GET /users?sort_key=name # sort by name in descending order
GET /users?sort_key=created_at&sort_direction=asc # sort by created_at in ascending order
When calling sort in a controller action, and the sort parameters are not provided, the default sort key and direction will be used.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Warped::Controllers::Sortable
sortable_by :name, :created_at
def index
users = sort(User.all)
render json: users
end
end
Request examples:
GET /users # sort by id in descending order
Complete documentation for Warped::Controllers::Sortable.
The Pageable
concern provides a method to paginate the records in a controller's action.
The method paginate
is used to paginate the records.
It will use the query parameters page
and per_page
to paginate the records.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Warped::Controllers::Pageable
def index
users = paginate(User.all)
render json: users, meta: pagination
end
end
Request examples:
GET /users?page=1&per_page=10 # returns the first page of users with 10 records per page
GET /users?per_page=25 # returns the first page of users with 25 records per page
GET /users?page=2&per_page=25 # returns the second page of users with 25 records per page
Complete documentation for Warped::Controllers::Pageable.
The Tabulatable
concern provides a method to filter, sort, search, and paginate the records in a controller's action.
The method tabulate
is used to filter, sort, search, and paginate the records. So, in the case that the controller action needs to filter, sort, search, and paginate the records, the tabulate
method can be used.
The tabulatable concern provides the tabulatable_by
method, which passes the values to filterable_by
and sortable_by
.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Warped::Controllers::Tabulatable
tabulatable_by :name, :email, :created_at
def index
users = tabulate(User.all)
render json: users, meta: pagination
end
end
Request examples:
GET /users?age[]=18&age[]=30&age.rel=between&sort_key=name&sort_direction=asc&q=John&page=2&per_page=10
# returns the second page of users with 10 records per page, where the age is between 18 and 30, sorted by name in ascending order, and searched by the term John
Just like paginate
, when calling the tabulate
method in the controller action, the pagination
method can be used to access the pagination information.
Complete documentation for Warped::Controllers::Tabulatable.
Warped comes with a set of partials and stimulus controllers that can be used to make development of index views easier/faster.
In order to use the views provided by the gem, warped provides ::Ui modules for each of the before menttioned concerns. These Warped::Controllers::<ConcernName>::Ui
provide the helper methods needed by the partials in order to work.
The partials are:
Warped::Controllers::Filterable::Ui
->warped/_filters.html.erb
Warped::Controllers::Searchable::Ui
->warped/_search.html.erb
Warped::Controllers::Pageable::Ui
->warped/_pagination.html.erb
Warped::Controllers::Tabulatable::Ui
->warped/_table.html.erb
Example:
# app/models/user.rb
class User < ApplicationRecord
# first_name :string
# last_name :string
# email :string
# created_at :datetime
scope :search, ->(query) { where('first_name LIKE ? OR last_name LIKE ? OR email LIKE ?', "%#{query}%", "%#{query}%", "%#{query}%") }
end
# app/controllers/users_controller.rb
class UsersController < ApplicationControlelr
include Warped::Controllers::Tabulatable::Ui
tabulatable_by name: { kind: :string }, email: { kind: :string }, created_at: { kind: :date_time }
def index
@users = tabulate(User.all)
end
def show
@user = User.find(params[:id])
end
def destroy
User.find(params[:id]).destroy
redirect_to users_path
end
end
# app/views/users/index.html.erb
<%= render "warped/table", collection: @users,
path: users_path,
columns: [
Warped::Table::Column.new(:id, 'ID'),
Warped::Table::Column.new(:full_name, 'Full Name', method: ->(user) { [user.first_name, user.last_name].compact_blank.join(" ") }),
Warped::Table::Column.new(:email),
Warped::Table::Column.new(:created_at, 'Created At', method: ->(user) { user.created_at.strftime('%Y-%m-%d') })
],
actions: [
Warped::Table::Action.new('Show', ->(user) { user_path(user) }),
Warped::Table::Action.new('Delete', ->(user) { user_path(user) }, turbo_method: :delete, turbo_confirm: 'Are you sure?')
],
turbo_action: :replace
%>
The code above, renders a table with:
- The columns
ID
,Full Name
,Email
, andCreated At
, all of which are sortable. - The actions
Show
andDelete
for each user. The actionDelete
will use theDELETE
method and will ask for confirmation before executing the action. - The filters for the
name
,email
, andcreated_at
fields. - A search input that will search the users by the term provided.
- A pagination component that will paginate the users, showing 10 users per page by default.
- The table filtering/sorting/searching/pagination will be done using the turbo-action=replace.
Complete documentation for Warped built-in Partials.
The gem provides a Warped::Service::Base
class that can be used to create services in a rails application.
class PrintService < Warped::Service::Base
def call
puts 'Hello, world!'
end
end
The call
method is the entry point for the service. It can be overridden to provide the service's functionality.
class PrintService < Warped::Service::Base
def call
puts "Hello, #{name}!"
end
private
def name
'world'
end
end
The way of calling the service is by calling the call
method on the service class.
The .call method is a class method that creates a new instance of the service, passing the arguments to the initialize
method, and then calls the call
method on the new instance.
PrintService.call # Executes new.call
If you want to pass arguments to the service, you can so by defining the initialize
method in the service class.
class PrintService < Warped::Service::Base
def initialize(name = 'John')
@name = name
end
def call
puts "Hello, #{@name}!"
end
end
PrintService.call # Executes new.call, prints "Hello, John!"
PrintService.call('world') # Executes new('world').call, prints "Hello, world!"
Complete documentation for Warped::Services.
The gem provides a Warped::Jobs::Base
class that can be used to create background jobs in a rails application.
class PrintJob < Warped::Jobs::Base
def perform
puts 'Hello, world!'
end
end
Warped::Jobs::Base is a subclass of ActiveJob::Base, and can be used as a regular ActiveJob job.
The superclass can be overriden to inherit from a different job class, by changing it in the config/initializers/warped.rb
file.
# config/initializers/warped.rb
Warped.configure do |config|
config.job_superclass = 'ApplicationJob'
end
Complete documentation for Warped::Jobs.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and the created tag, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/gogrow-dev/warped. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Everyone interacting in the Warped project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.