# Gon gem — get your Rails variables in your js ![Gon. You should try this. If you look closer - you will see an elephant.](https://github.com/gazay/gon/raw/master/doc/logo_small.png) ### Build Status ![http://travis-ci.org/gazay/gon](https://secure.travis-ci.org/gazay/gon.png) If you need to send some data to your js files and you don't want to do this with long way through views and parsing - use this force! Now with [Jbuilder](https://github.com/rails/jbuilder) and [Rabl](https://github.com/nesquena/rabl) support! For Sinatra available [gon-sinatra](https://github.com/gazay/gon-sinatra). For .Net MVC available port [NGon](https://github.com/brooklynDev/NGon). ## An example of typical use ### Very good and detailed example and reasons to use is considered in [railscast](http://railscasts.com/episodes/324-passing-data-to-javascript) by Ryan Bates When you need to send some start data from your controller to your js you might be doing something like this: 1. Write this data in controller(presenter/model) to some variable 2. In view for this action you put this variable to some objects by data attributes, or write js right in view 3. Then there can be two ways in js: + if you previously wrote data in data attributes - you should parse this attributes and write data to some js variable. + if you wrote js right in view (many frontenders would shame you for that) - you just use data from this js - OK. 4. You can use your data in your js And everytime when you need to send some data from action to js you do this. With gon you configure it firstly - just put in layout one tag, and add gem line to your Gemfile and do the following: 1. Write variables by ``` ruby gon.variable_name = variable_value ``` 2. In your js you get this by ``` js gon.variable_name ``` 3. profit? ## Usage `app/views/layouts/application.html.erb` ``` erb some title <%= include_gon %> ... ``` To camelize your variables in js you can use: ``` erb some title <%= include_gon(:camel_case => true) %> ... ``` You can change the namespace of the variables: ``` erb some title <%= include_gon(:namespace => 'serverExports') %> ... ``` You put something like this in the action of your controller: ``` ruby @your_int = 123 @your_array = [1,2] @your_hash = {'a' => 1, 'b' => 2} gon.your_int = @your_int gon.your_other_int = 345 + gon.your_int gon.your_array = @your_array gon.your_array << gon.your_int gon.your_hash = @your_hash gon.all_variables # > {:your_int => 123, :your_other_int => 468, :your_array => [1, 2, 123], :your_hash => {'a' => 1, 'b' => 2}} gon.your_array # > [1, 2, 123] gon.clear # gon.all_variables now is {} ``` Access the varaibles from your JavaScript file: ``` js alert(gon.your_int) alert(gon.your_other_int) alert(gon.your_array) alert(gon.your_hash) ``` With camelize: ``` js alert(gon.yourInt) alert(gon.yourOtherInt) alert(gon.yourArray) alert(gon.yourHash) ``` With custom namespace and camelize: ``` js alert(customNamespace.yourInt) alert(customNamespace.yourOtherInt) alert(customNamespace.yourArray) alert(customNamespace.yourHash) ``` ## Usage with Rabl Now you can write your variables assign logic to templates with [Rabl](https://github.com/nesquena/rabl). The way of writing Rabl templates is very clearly described in their repo. Add Rabl to your Gemfile `Gemfile` ``` ruby gem 'rabl' ``` Profit of using Rabl with gon: 1. You can clean your controllers now! 2. Work with database objects and collections clearly and easyly 3. All power of Rabl 4. You can still be lazy and don't use common way to transfer data in js 5. And so on For using gon with Rabl you need to create new Rabl template and map gon to it. For example you have model Post with attributes :title and :body. You want to get all your posts in your js as an Array. That's what you need to do: 1. Create Rabl template. I prefer creating special directory for templates which are not view templates. `app/goners/posts/index.rabl` ``` rabl collection @posts => 'posts' attributes :id, :title, :body ``` 2. All you need to do after that is only to map this template to gon. `app/controllers/post_controller.rb#index` ``` ruby def index # some controller logic @posts = Post.all # Rabl works with instance variables of controller gon.rabl 'app/goners/posts/index.rabl' # some controller logic end ``` Thats it! Now you will get in your js gon.posts variable which is Array of post objects with attributes :id, :title and :body. In javascript file for view of this action write call to your variable: ``` js alert(gon.posts) alert(gon.posts[0]) alert(gon.posts[0].post.body) ``` P.s. If you didn't put include_gon tag in your html head area - it wouldn't work. You can read about this in common usage above. ### Some tips of usage Rabl with gon: If you don't use alias in Rabl template: ``` rabl collection @posts .... ``` instead of using that: ``` rabl collection @posts => 'alias' .... ``` Rabl will return you an array and gon by default will put it to variable gon.rabl Two ways how you can change it - using aliases or you can add alias to gon mapping method: ``` ruby # your controller stuff here gon.rabl 'path/to/rabl/file', :as => 'alias' ``` ## Usage with Jbuilder Use gon with [Jbuilder](https://github.com/rails/jbuilder) as with [Rabl](https://guthub.com/nesquena/rabl): Jbuilder works now only on Ruby 1.9+, so Gon support for Jbuilder works on 1.9+ only 0. Add jbuilder to your Gemfile (because of it depends on ActiveSuppurt '~> 3.0.0') `Gemfile` ``` ruby gem 'jbuilder' ``` 1. Create Jbuilder template. `app/views/posts/index.json.jbuilder` ``` jbuilder json.posts @posts, :id, :title, :body ``` 2. In your controller you should map this template to gon. ``` ruby def index # some controller logic @posts = Post.all gon.jbuilder 'app/views/posts/index.json.jbuilder' # some controller logic end ``` In javascript file for view of this action write call to your variable: Now you can use partials in jbuilder: `app/views/posts/index.json.jbuilder` ``` jbuilder json.partial! 'app/views/posts/_part.json.jbuilder', :comments => @posts[0].comments ``` `app/views/posts/_part.json.jbuilder` ``` jbuilder json.comments comments.map{ |it| 'comment#' + it.id } ``` ``` js alert(gon.posts) alert(gon.posts[0]) alert(gon.posts[0].post.body) alert(gon.comments) alert(gon.comments[0]) ``` P.s. If you didn't put include_gon tag in your html head area - it wouldn't work. You can read about this in common usage above. ## Installation Puts this line into `Gemfile` then run `$ bundle`: ``` ruby gem 'gon', '2.1.2' ``` Or if you are old-school Rails 2 developer put this into `config/environment.rb` and run `$ rake gems:install`: ``` ruby config.gem 'gon', :version => '2.1.2' ``` Or manually install gon gem: `$ gem install gon` ## Contributors * @gazay Special thanks to @brainopia, @kossnocorp and @ai. ## License The MIT License Copyright (c) 2011-2012 gazay Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.