== Description

This plugin implements Flickr's machine tags as explained
here[http://www.flickr.com/groups/api/discuss/72157594497877875]
while still maintaining standard tagging behavior.

Basically, a machine tag has a namespace, a predicate and a value in the format
    [namespace]:[predicate]=[value] 

This allows for more precise tagging as tags can have unlimited contexts provided
by combinations of namespaces and predicates. These unlimited contexts also make
machine tags ripe for modeling relationships between objects. Read the Tag class
documentation for a more thorough explanation.

== Install

Install as a gem

    bash> gem install cldwalker-has_machine_tags -s http://gems.github.com

    # add in your environment.rb
    config.gem "cldwalker-has_machine_tags", :source => "http://gems.github.com", :lib => "has_machine_tags"

Or as a plugin

    bash> script/plugin install git://github.com/cldwalker/has_machine_tags.git


Migrate your database from Rails root:
  
    bash> script/generate has_machine_tags_migration
    bash> rake db:migrate

== Usage

Setup a model to use has_machine_tags

  class Url < ActiveRecord::Base
    has_machine_tags
  end

Let's create some urls with machine tags!

    url = Url.create(:name=>"http://github.com/cldwalker/has_machine_tags",
      :tag_list=>'gem:type=tagging,flickr')

    url2 = Url.create(:name=>"http://github.com/giraffesoft/is_taggable",
      :tag_list=>'gem:type=tagging, gem:user=giraffesoft')

    url3 = Url.create(:name=>"http://github.com/datamapper/data_mapper/tree/master",
      :tag_list=>'gem:type=orm')

    url.tag_list # => ["gem:type=tagging", "flickr"]
    
    url.tags # => [<Tag name:"gem:type=tagging">, <Tag name:"flickr">]

Let's query them:

    # Query urls tagged as a gem having type tagging
    Url.tagged_with 'gem:type=tagging'  # => [url, url2] from above

    # Non-machine tags work of course
    Url.tagged_with 'flickr'  # => [url] from above

    # tagged_with() is a named_scope so do your sweet chaining
    Url.tagged_with('flickr').yet_another_finder(:sweet).paginate(:per_page=>30)

Nothing interesting so far. We could've done the same with normal tagging.

But when we start with wildcard machine tag syntax, machine tags become more valuable:

    # Query urls tagged as gems (namespace = 'gem')
    Url.tagged_with 'gem:'  # => [url, url2, url3] from above

    # Query urls tagged as having a user, regardless of namespace and value (predicate = 'user')
    Url.tagged_with 'user='  # => [url2] from above

    # Query urls tagged as gems having a user ( namespace ='gem' AND predicate = 'user')
    Url.tagged_with 'gem:user'  # => [url2] from above

    # Query urls tagged as having a tagging value, regardless of namespace and predicate (value = 'tagging')
    Url.tagged_with '=tagging'  # => [url, url2] from above

More details on machine tag syntax can be found in the Tag class.

=== More Usage

The wildcard machine tag syntax can also be used to fetch tags:

    # Tags that are gems
    Tag.machine_tags 'gem:' # => [<Tag name:"gem:type=tagging">, <Tag name:"gem:user=giraffesoft">]

    # Tags that have a user predicate
    Tag.machine_tags 'user=' # => [<Tag name:"gem:user=giraffesoft">]

Of course you can do the standard tag_list manipulation:

    url.tag_list = "comma, delimited"
    url.save
    url.tag_list # =>['comma', 'delimited']

    url.tag_list = ['or', 'an', 'array']
    url.save
    url.tag_list # =>['or', 'an' 'array']

    #Add a tag
    url.tag_list << 'another_tag' 
    url.save
    url.tag_list # => ["gem:type=tagging", "flickr", "another_tag']

    #Delete a tag
    url.tag_list.delete('another_tag')
    url.save
    url.tag_list # => ["gem:type=tagging", "flickr"]


== Caveats

This is an experiment in progress so the api is subject to change.

Since machine tags require special characters to implement its goodness,
these characters are off limit unless used in the machine tag context:

  '.', ':' , '*' , '=' , ','

== Todo

* More tests!
* Console methods for showing relations between namespaces, predicates + values
* Add support for DataMapper to be more ORM-agnostic
* Play friendly with other tagging plugins as needed.

== Credits

Thanks goes to Flickr for popularizing this tagging model.
Thanks also goes to the {acts-as-taggable-on plugin}[http://github.com/mbleigh/acts-as-taggable-on/tree/master]
for their finder code and the {is_taggable plugin}[http://github.com/giraffesoft/is_taggable/tree/master]
for demonstrating sane testing for a Rails plugin.