Ramenu is a simple Ruby on Rails plugin for creating and managing a menu navigation for a Rails project.
It provides helpers for creating navigation elements with a flexible interface.
Requirements
Installation
RubyGems is the preferred way to install Ramenu and the best way if you want install a stable version.
$ gem install ramenu
Specify the Gem dependency in the Bundler Gemfile
.
gem "ramenu"
Use Bundler and the :git option if you want to grab the latest version from the Git repository.
Basic Usage
Creating a navigation menu in your Rails app using Ramenu is really straightforward.
There are two kinds of menus types, statics and volatiles. The first are kept whereas the second ones are only defined in controllers.
Aside to the menu, you may want to set flags to interact with you menu generator.
To define static menus, do it only once by creating an initializer, there will be availlable everywhere in your controllers.
# config/initializers/ramenu_config.rb
Ramenu.configure do |config|
# define a menu (by default, the :default menu is used)
config.add_menu :welcome, :root_path #, :menu => :default
# define a menu
config.add_menu :home, :root_path, :menu => :bottom_menu
# definer takes as argument the symbol name of the menus/flags to use
config.definer :main_menu do |d|
# add_menu method here takes the sames arguments as in a controller (see below)
d.add_menu :home, :root_path
d.add_menu :account, :root_path
d.add_menu :bien, :root_path
end
# definer have an optional argument to pass options.
# The main option is ':flag_for_menu'.
# Turn it to 'true' and your definer will associate a flag of the same name for each menu
# created. The flag is an option set in the menu element, and is later accessible in the
# builder, use it at your own convenience.
#
config.definer :main_menu, :flag_for_menu => true do |d|
# add_menu method here takes the sames arguments as in a controller (see below)
d.add_menu :home, :root_path
d.add_menu :account, :root_path
d.add_menu :bien, :root_path
# flags attributes can be set here
d.set_flag :home, true
d.set_flag :bien, false
# you can use as may flag as you need.
# theses options are accessible in your builders (see below)
d.add_menu :visits, :users_path, :right_icon => :visits_icon_flag
# and flag can be set with any value, boolean, or symbols for example
d.set_flag :visits_icon_flag, :waiting
end
end
In your controller, call add_menu
to push a new element on the menu stack. add_menu
requires two arguments: the name of the menu and the target path. See the section "Menus Element" for more details about name and target class types.
The third, optional argument is a Hash of options to customize the menu.
You can use the same definer as in the configuration, by calling definer
, except that it will create a volatile block by default.
During the rendering, volatile menus/flags will merge with statics ones or override them if they have the same name.
Doing that, you can define default flags in the configuration, and change their values in the controllers.
class MyController
add_menu "home", :root_path
add_menu "my", :my_path
# you may specify the menus you want to use instead of the default one
add_menu "my", :my_path, :menu => :bottom_menu
# to add sub-menu (alternate menus for the same level)
add_menu :users, :users_path do |mm|
# add submenu using a symbol for translation (see translation below)
mm.add_menu :accounts, :accounts_path
# or a string
mm.add_menu "Profiles", :profiles_path
end
# to add a menu for current view
add_menu_for_current "My profile"
# definer takes as argument the symbol name of the menu/flags to use
definer :main_menu do |d|
d.add_menu :home, :root_path
d.add_menu :bien, :root_path
end
# definer in the controller takes the same optional argument as in the configuration, to pass options.
definer :main_menu, :flag_for_menu => true do |d|
d.add_menu :folder, :folders_path
# volatile flags override statics ones
d.set_flag :visits_icon_flag, :valid
end
def index
# ...
add_menu "index", index_path
end
def create
# definer in the controller takes the same optional argument as in the configuration, to pass options.
# By default, volatile blocks are defined in the controller. You may use the <tt>static</tt> option to create static block.
definer :main_menu, :flag_for_menu => true, :static => true do |d|
d.add_menu :account, :account_path
# flags attributes can be set here
d.set_flag :home, true
d.set_flag :bien, false
# you can use as may flag as you need.
# theses options are accessible in your builders (see below)
d.add_menu :cart, :cart_path, :right_icon => :cart_icon_flag
# and flag can be set with any value, boolean, or symbols for example
d.set_flag :cart_icon_flag, :waiting
end
end
end
In your view, you can render the menu menu with the render_menus
helper.
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/>
<title>untitled</title>
</head>
<body>
<%= render_ramenu %>
</body>
</html>
render_ramenu
understands a limited set of options. For example, you can pass change the default separator with the :separator
option, or the default menu to use with the :menu
option.
<body>
<%= render_ramenu :separator => ' / ', :menu => :side_menu_menu %>
</body>
More complex customizations require a custom Builder, see custom builder below.
A menu is composed by a number of Element
objects. Each object contains two attributes: the name of the menu and the target path.
When you call add_menu
, the method automatically creates a new Element
object for you and append it to the menus stack. Element
name and path can be one of the following Ruby types:
Symbol
If the value is a Symbol, it can be used for two different things.
At first, the library try to call the corresponding method in the same context and sets the Element
attribute to the returned value.
Then, if no method are found with that name, the library search for a key in the translation. (see below for translation keys examples)
class MyController
# The Name is set to the value returned by
# the :root_name method.
add_menu :function_name, "/"
add_menu :translate_me, "/"
protected
def function_name
"the name"
end
end
Proc
If the value is a Proc, the library calls the proc passing the current view context as argument and sets the Element
attribute to the returned value. This is useful if you want to postpone the execution to get access to some special methods/variables created in your controller action.
class MyController
# The Name is set to the value returned by
# the :root_name method.
add_menu Proc.new { |c| c.my_helper_method },
"/"
end
String
If the value is a String, the library sets the Element
attribute to the string value.
class MyController
# The Name is set to the value returned by
# the :root_name method.
add_menu "homepage", "/"
end
The add_menu
method understands all options you are used to pass to a Rails controller filter.
In fact, behind the scenes this method uses a before_filter
to store the tab in the @ramenu_menus
variable.
Taking advantage of Rails filter options, you can restrict a tab to a selected group of actions in the same controller.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
add_menu "admin", :admin_path
add_menu "posts", :posts_path, :only => %w(index show)
end
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
add_menu "admin", :admin_path, :if => :admin_controller?
def admin_controller?
self.class.name =~ /^Admin(::|Controller)/
end
end
Internationalization and Localization
Ramenu is compatible with the standard Rails internationalization framework.
For our previous example, if you want to localize your menu, define a new menus node in your .yml file with all the keys for your elements.
The convention is 'ramenu.menus' followed by your menus symbol (:default by default) then by the menu hierachy.
add_menu :users, :users_path do |mm|
# add submenu using a symbol for translation (see translation below)
mm.add_child :accounts, :accounts_path
end
The menu itself is translated here by 'ramenu.menus.default.users.root', and the sub-menu is 'ramenu.menus.default.users.accounts'.
# config/locales/en.yml
en:
ramenu:
menus:
default:
translate_me: "Translated"
users:
root: "Menu title"
accounts: "Accounts sub menu"
In your controller, you can also use the I18n.t
method directly as it returns a string.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
add_menu I18n.t("events.new_year"), :events_path
add_menu I18n.t("events.holidays"), :events_path, :only => %w(holidays)
end
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
add_menu I18n.t("homepage"), :root_path
end
Custom builder
If you need a specific menu, you'll need to define a custom builder.
To create such builder, add a file like the following.
In your builder, you can use flag_for(element, [:name_of_the_flag])
, without its optional argument you'll get the flag named ':flag'
# /lib/ramenu/menus/html_builder.rb
module Ramenu
module Menus
# The HtmlBuilder is an html5 menu builder.
# It provides a simple way to render menu navigation as html5 tags.
# It may be used to display breadcrumbs-like menu or site menu, it is just a question of css.
#
# To use this custom Builder pass the option :builder => BuilderClass to the `render_ramenu` helper method.
#
class HtmlBuilder < Builder
def render
# creating nav id=breadcrumb
@context.content_tag(:nav, :id => @options[:id], :role => @options[:role]) do
render_elements(@elements)
end
end
def render_elements(elements)
content = nil
elements.each do |element|
if content.nil?
content = render_element(element)
else
content << render_element(element)
end
end
@context.content_tag(:ul, content)
end
def render_element(element)
name = compute_name(element)
path = compute_path(element)
content = @context.link_to(path, :title => name) do
@context.content_tag(:span, "#{name}", :class => 'label')
end
# rendering sub-elements
if element.childs.length > 0
content = content + render_elements(element.childs)
end
class_arr = []
class_arr << 'activ' if flag_for(element) == true
class_arr << 'highlight' if element.childs.length > 0
@context.content_tag(:li, content, :class => class_arr.compact.join(' '))
end
end
end
end
And do not forget to add /lib to rails autoload_paths by adding the following line.
# config/application.rb
module MyNiceRailsApplication
class Application < Rails::Application
...
# Custom directories with classes and modules you want to be autoloadable.
# config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/extras)
config.autoload_paths += %W( #{config.root}/lib )
...
end
end
Use your new builder by adding the builder option to the renderer.
<%= render_ramenu(:builder => Ramenu::Menus::HtmlBuilder) %>
Resources
License
Ramenu is Copyright (c) 2013 La Fourmi Immo.
This is Free Software distributed under the MIT license and include code from Simone Carletti Copyright (c) 2009-2012.
Some ideas (I18n, Configuration) comes from stijnster/alacarte.