require 'draper/decoratable/equality' module Draper # Provides shortcuts to decorate objects directly, so you can do # `@product.decorate` instead of `ProductDecorator.new(@product)`. # # This module is included by default into `ActiveRecord::Base` and # `Mongoid::Document`, but you're using another ORM, or want to decorate # plain old Ruby objects, you can include it manually. module Decoratable extend ActiveSupport::Concern include Draper::Decoratable::Equality # Decorates the object using the inferred {#decorator_class}. # @param [Hash] options # see {Decorator#initialize} def decorate(options = {}) decorator_class.decorate(self, options) end # (see ClassMethods#decorator_class) def decorator_class self.class.decorator_class end # The list of decorators that have been applied to the object. # # @return [Array] `[]` def applied_decorators [] end # (see Decorator#decorated_with?) # @return [false] def decorated_with?(decorator_class) false end # Checks if this object is decorated. # # @return [false] def decorated? false end module ClassMethods # Decorates a collection of objects. Used at the end of a scope chain. # # @example # Product.popular.decorate # @param [Hash] options # see {Decorator.decorate_collection}. def decorate(options = {}) collection = Rails::VERSION::MAJOR >= 4 ? all : scoped decorator_class.decorate_collection(collection, options.reverse_merge(with: nil)) end # Infers the decorator class to be used by {Decoratable#decorate} (e.g. # `Product` maps to `ProductDecorator`). # # @return [Class] the inferred decorator class. def decorator_class prefix = respond_to?(:model_name) ? model_name : name decorator_name = "#{prefix}Decorator" decorator_name.constantize rescue NameError => error raise unless error.missing_name?(decorator_name) raise Draper::UninferrableDecoratorError.new(self) end # Compares with possibly-decorated objects. # # @return [Boolean] def ===(other) super || (other.respond_to?(:object) && super(other.object)) end end end end