# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Configures your navigation
SimpleNavigation::Configuration.run do |navigation|
# Specify a custom renderer if needed.
# The default renderer is SimpleNavigation::Renderer::List which renders HTML lists.
# The renderer can also be specified as option in the render_navigation call.
# navigation.renderer = Your::Custom::Renderer
# Specify the class that will be applied to active navigation items.
# Defaults to 'selected' navigation.selected_class = 'your_selected_class'
navigation.selected_class = 'active'
# Specify the class that will be applied to the current leaf of
# active navigation items. Defaults to 'simple-navigation-active-leaf'
# navigation.active_leaf_class = 'your_active_leaf_class'
# Item keys are normally added to list items as id.
# This setting turns that off
# navigation.autogenerate_item_ids = false
# You can override the default logic that is used to autogenerate the item ids.
# To do this, define a Proc which takes the key of the current item as argument.
# The example below would add a prefix to each key.
# navigation.id_generator = Proc.new {|key| "my-prefix-#{key}"}
# If you need to add custom html around item names, you can define a proc that
# will be called with the name you pass in to the navigation.
# The example below shows how to wrap items spans.
# navigation.name_generator = Proc.new {|name, item| "#{name}"}
# The auto highlight feature is turned on by default.
# This turns it off globally (for the whole plugin)
# navigation.auto_highlight = false
# If this option is set to true, all item names will be considered as safe (passed through html_safe). Defaults to false.
# navigation.consider_item_names_as_safe = false
# Define the primary navigation
navigation.items do |primary|
# Add an item to the primary navigation. The following params apply:
# key - a symbol which uniquely defines your navigation item in the scope of the primary_navigation
# name - will be displayed in the rendered navigation. This can also be a call to your I18n-framework.
# url - the address that the generated item links to. You can also use url_helpers (named routes, restful routes helper, url_for etc.)
# options - can be used to specify attributes that will be included in the rendered navigation item (e.g. id, class etc.)
# some special options that can be set:
# :if - Specifies a proc to call to determine if the item should
# be rendered (e.g. if: -> { current_user.admin? }). The
# proc should evaluate to a true or false value and is evaluated in the context of the view.
# :unless - Specifies a proc to call to determine if the item should not
# be rendered (e.g. unless: -> { current_user.admin? }). The
# proc should evaluate to a true or false value and is evaluated in the context of the view.
# :method - Specifies the http-method for the generated link - default is :get.
# :highlights_on - if autohighlighting is turned off and/or you want to explicitly specify
# when the item should be highlighted, you can set a regexp which is matched
# against the current URI. You may also use a proc, or the symbol :subpath.
#
primary.dom_class = 'nav nav-stacked in'
client_sub_items = [
{name: :customer_search, descr: 'Clients', url: "customers", icon: 'group'},
{name: :contract_search, descr: 'Contrats', url: "contracts", icon: 'file-text'}
]
if current_user.has_role? :admin
client_sub_items << {name: :customer_merges, descr: 'Fusionner clients', url: "customers_merges", icon: 'code-fork'}
client_sub_items << {name: :new_customer, descr: 'Nouveau client', url: "customers/new/particulier", icon: 'user'}
else
client_sub_items << {name: :new_customer, descr: 'Nouveau prospect', url: "customers/prospects/new", icon: 'user'}
end
client_sub_items.each do |sni|
primary.item sni[:name], sni[:descr], "#{ENV['CUSTOMER_URL']}/#{sni[:url]}", icon: "icon-#{sni[:icon]}"
end
ship_sub_items = []
if can?(:read, :shipping)
ship_sub_items << {name: :dashboard, descr: 'Tableau de bord', url: "shipping/shipment_orders", icon: 'dashboard'}
if can?(:manage, :shipping)
ship_sub_items << {name: :projections, descr: 'Projections', url: "shipping/shipment_orders/forecast", icon: 'signal'}
ship_sub_items << {name: :vehicles, descr: 'Véhicules', url: "shipping/vehicles", icon: 'truck'}
ship_sub_items << {name: :employees, descr: 'Employés', url: "shipping/employees", icon: 'user'}
ship_sub_items << {name: :shipping_routes, descr: 'Routes', url: "shipping/routes", icon: 'road'}
end
ship_sub_items.each do |sni|
primary.item sni[:name], sni[:descr], "#{ENV['SHIPPING_URL']}/#{sni[:url]}", icon: "icon-#{sni[:icon]}"
end
end
# Add an item which has a sub navigation (same params, but with block)
# primary.item :key_2, 'name', url, options do |sub_nav|
# # Add an item to the sub navigation (same params again)
# sub_nav.item :key_2_1, 'name', url, options
# end
# You can also specify a condition-proc that needs to be fullfilled to display an item.
# Conditions are part of the options. They are evaluated in the context of the views,
# thus you can use all the methods and vars you have available in the views.
# primary.item :key_3, 'Admin', url, class: 'special', if: -> { current_user.admin? }
# primary.item :key_4, 'Account', url, unless: -> { logged_in? }
# you can also specify html attributes to attach to this particular level
# works for all levels of the menu
# primary.dom_attributes = {id: 'menu-id', class: 'menu-class'}
# You can turn off auto highlighting for a specific level
# primary.auto_highlight = false
end
end