abyme is an easy and form-agnostic way to handle nested attributes in Rails, using stimulus under the hood. Here's an example :
# views/projects/_form.html.erb
<%= form_for @project do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :title %>
<%= f.text_area :description %>
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) %>
<%= f.submit 'Save' %>
<% end %>
Supposing you have a Project
that has_many :tasks
and a partial located in views/abyme/_task_fields
containing your form fields for tasks
, the abyme_for
command will generate and display 3 elements in this order :
- A
div
containing all task fields for@project.tasks
(either persisted or already built instances oftasks
) - A
div
which will contain all additional tasks about to be created (added through theAdd task
button below) - A
button
to generate fields for new instances of tasks
Have a look below to learn more about configuration and all its different options.
Check out our demo app here : https://abyme-demo.herokuapp.com/
Source code is right here : https://github.com/bear-in-mind/abyme_demo
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'abyme'
And then execute:
$ bundle
$ yarn add abyme
***IMPORTANT : If you use stimulus < 3.0, please use yarn package v0.6.4 ***
If you have any issue importing or compiling the controller, you can simply copy-paste it in your own app/javascript/controllers
directory.
If you don't have Stimulus installed yet, please run :
yarn add @hotwired/stimulus
With Stimulus installed, you need to register the stimulus
controller that takes care of the JavaScript behaviour. You can launch this generator :
rails generate abyme:stimulus
Or you can register it yourself :
// app/javascript/controllers/index.js
import { Application } from " @hotwired/stimulus"
import { definitionsFromContext } from "stimulus/webpack-helpers"
// Add this line below
import { AbymeController } from 'abyme'
const application = Application.start()
const context = require.context("controllers", true, /_controller\.js$/)
application.load(definitionsFromContext(context))
// And this one
application.register('abyme', AbymeController)
To learn more about the why of this gem, check out our wiki
You may also check out our step by step tutorial and our advanced configuration guide (currently in construction).
As in our our tutorial, we'll assume we have a Project
model, that has_many :tasks
for the rest of the documentation.
To be up and running in no time, we built a few generators. Feel free to skip these if you prefer a manual implementation.
To generate everything you need with one command, use this generator :
rails generate abyme:resource project tasks
# Includes configuration in Project model
# Adds abyme_attributes in ProjectsController permitted params
# Creates a partial and minimum boilerplate in app/views/abyme/_task_fields.html.erb
Now, head to your parent form and keep reading !
You can also specify attributes to be permitted, or permit all of them (see below). This will populate the partial with input fields for the specified attributes
rails generate abyme:resource project tasks description title
# Includes configuration in Project model, including permitted attributes
# Adds abyme_attributes in ProjectsController permitted params
# Creates a partial with input fields for the specified attributes in app/views/abyme/_task_fields.html.erb
All the generators launched by the main resource
generator are available individually :
# Controller
rails generate abyme:controller Projects
# Model
# Permit only a few attributes
rails generate abyme:model project tasks description title
# Permit all attributes
rails generate abyme:model project participants all_attributes
# Views
# Without attributes (use this if you're not using SimpleForm or don't care about generating input fields)
rails generate abyme:view tasks
# With a few attributes
rails generate abyme:view tasks name description
# With all attributes
rails generate abyme:view tasks all_attributes
💡 Don't forget to include Abyme::Model
in your parent model
In models, the abyme_for :association
acts as an alias for this command :
accepts_nested_attributes_for :association, reject_if: :all_blank, :allow_destroy: true
permit: []
: allows you to generate a hash of attributes that can be easily called on the controller side through the::abyme_attributes
class method (see details below).
abymize :association, permit: [:name, :description]
# You may also permit all attributes like so :
abymize :association, permit: :all_attributes
reject: []
: allows you to add all attributes to::abyme_attributes
, excepted the ones specified.
abymize :association, reject: [:password]
options: {}
: [the same options] you may pass to theaccepts_nested_attributes
method (see this link for details)
abyme_for :association, limit: 3, allow_destroy: false
Returns a hash to the right format to be included in the strong params
on the controller side. For a Project
model with nested :tasks
:
Project.abyme_attributes
# => {tasks_attributes: [:title, :description, :id, :_destroy]}
Infers the name of the resource from the controller name, and calls the ::abyme_attributes
method on it. Hence, in your ProjectsController
:
def project_params
params.require(:project).permit(:title, :description, abyme_attributes)
end
This is the container for all your nested fields. It takes the symbolized association as a parameter, along with options, and an optional block to specify any layout you may wish for the different parts of the abyme
builder.
💡 Please note an id is automatically added to this element, which value is : abyme--association_name
.
💡 If you don't pass a block, records
, new_records
and add_association
will be called and will appear in this order in your layout.
partial:
: allows you to indicate a custom partial path for bothrecords
andnew_records
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks, partial: 'projects/task_fields') do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records %>
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
limit:
: allows you to limit the number of new fields that can be created through JS. If you need to limit the number of associations in database, you will need to add validations. You can also pass an option in your model as well.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks, limit: 5) do |abyme| %>
# Beyond 5 tasks, the add button won't add any more fields. See events section below to see how to handle the 'abyme:limit-reached' event
<%= abyme.records %>
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
min_count:
: by default, there won't be any blank fields added on page load. By passing amin_count
option, you can set how many empty fields should appear in the form.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks, min_count: 1) do |abyme| %>
# 1 blank task will automatically be added to the form.
<%= abyme.records %>
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
locals: {}
: allows you to pass some arbitrary variables to your partial.
<%= f.abyme_for(:comments, locals: {count: 0}) %>
The count
variable will be available in _comment_fields.html.erb
and equal 0 for both new and persisted records. If you need to differentiate between both, you can pass the same option to either #records and #new_records (see below)
If you're not passing a block, the abyme_for
method can take a few additional options:
button_text:
this will set theadd_association
button text to the string of your choice.
💡 All options that should be passed to either records
or new_records
below can be passed here and will be passed down.
A few options can be passed to abyme.records
:
collection:
: allows you to pass a collection of your choice to only display specific objects.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records(collection: @project.tasks.where(done: false)) %>
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
order:
: allows you to pass an ActiveRecordorder
method to sort your instances the way you want.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records(order: { created_at: :asc }) %>
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
partial:
: allows you to indicate a custom partial, if one has not already been passed toabyme_for
.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records %>
<%= abyme.new_records(partial: 'projects/task_fields') %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
fields_html:
: gives you the possibility to add any HTML attribute you may want to each set of fields. By default, anabyme--fields
and ansingular_association-fields
class are already present.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records(fields_html: { class: "some-class" }) %>
# Every set of persisted fields will have these 3 classes : 'abyme--fields', 'task-fields', and 'some-class'
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
wrapper_html:
: gives you the possibility to add any HTML attribute you may want to the wrapper containing all persisted fields.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records(wrapper_html: { class: "persisted-records" }) %>
# The wrapper containing all persisted task fields will have an id "abyme-tasks-wrapper" and a class "persisted-records"
<%= abyme.new_records %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
locals: {}
: allows you to pass some arbitrary variables to your partial. When passed to either #records or #new_records, the value will be different depending on whether the record for which the partial is called is persisted or not
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records(locals: {count: 1}) %>
<%= abyme.new_records(locals: {count: 2} %>
<%= add_associated_record(content: 'Add task' %>
<% end %>
In _task_fields.html.erb
, if the record has been dynamically added with the "Add" button, the count
variable will be equal to 2.
If the record has been loaded from existing associations, it will equal 1.
Here are the options that can be passed to abyme.new_records
:
position:
: allows you to specify whether new fields added dynamically should go at the top or at the bottom.:end
is the default value.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
<%= abyme.records %>
<%= abyme.new_records(position: :start) %>
<%= add_associated_record %>
<% end %>
partial:
: same as#records
fields_html:
: same as#records
wrapper_html:
: same as#records
-
locals:
: same as#records
These 2 methods behave the same. Here are their options :
tag:
: allows you to specify a tag of your choosing, like:a
, or:div
. Default is:button
.content:
: the text to display inside the element. Default isAdd association_name
html:
: gives you the possibility to add any HTML attribute you may want to the element.
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
# ...
<%= add_associated_record(tag: :a, content: "Add a super task", html: {id: "add-super-task"}) %>
<% end %>
As you may have seen above, you can also pass a block to the method to give it whatever HTML content you want :
<%= f.abyme_for(:tasks) do |abyme| %>
# ...
<%= add_associated_record(tag: :div, html: {id: "add-super-task", class: "flex"}) do %>
<i class="fas fa-plus"></i>
<h2>Add a super task</h2>
<% end %>
<% end %>
This part is still a work in progress and subject to change. We're providing some basic self-explanatory events to attach to. These are emitted by the main container (created by the abyme_for
method).
We're currently thinking about a way to attach to these via Stimulus. Coming soon !
abyme:before-add
abyme:after-add
abyme:before-remove
abyme:after-remove
document.getElementById('abyme--tasks').addEventListener('abyme:before-add', yourCallback)
abyme:limit-reached
const tasksContainer = document.getElementById('abyme--tasks');
tasksContainer.addEventListener('abyme:limit-reached', () => {
alert('You reached the max number of tasks !')
});
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.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/eki-177/abyme.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.