= Tagtical
This plugin was originally based on acts_as_taggable_on by Michael Bleigh (http://mbleigh.com/). That plugin
was based on acts_as_taggable_on_steroids by Jonathan Viney.
While a lot concepts are the same (taggings + tags tables using polymorphism), this adaption introduces
the concept of "relevance" for a tag and allows for the creation of subclasses on Tag.
For instance, if you want to tag a photo with "Mood Tags". You would simply subclass Tag with
Tag::Mood and you could add functionality specific to that model. This involves moving the "context"
off of Tagging and moving it onto Tag as a "type" column. It acts not only as a "context", but also
as a designator for the STI class. Subsequently, you could also add a "relevance" for how applicable
that mood is.
Tagtical allows for an arbitrary number of Tag subclasses, each of which can be extended to the needs
of the application. However, a tag subclass is not required! If you have many custom tag types that you
create on the fly, you can wait until a later time to create a tag subclass.
Here are the main differences between tagtical and acts_as_taggable_on:
1. Add "relevance" to the Tagging class so you can weight the tags to the object.
2. Tagtical removes "context" off the taggings table and adds "type" onto the tags table.
3. The traditional functionality of tags is preserved while laying the foundation for STI on the Tag class.
You can choose to extend the Tag class at a later time.
4. Tag "name" now becomes tag "value". The difference is small, but significant. If you had
GeoTag's, for example, you wouldn't refer to its "name", you would refer to its "value". The value
could be a serialized field of long and lat if you wanted.
5. Support a config/tagtical.yml to further configure the application. For example, since most people
usually have one User class for their application, there is no reason to do polymorphic on "tagger",
so I give the user the option to specify the class_name specifically for tagger.
Additions include:
1. Scopes are created on Tag so you can do photo.tags.color and grab all the tags of type Tag::Color, for example.
2. Scopes are also created on the Taggable model so you could do Model.with_colors("red", "blue") and it would return everything tagged with those colors.
== Installation
=== Rails & Ruby Versions
Tagtical was developed on Rails 3.05 and Ruby 1.9.2
It can probably work with older versions, but would take a few tweaks.
==== Plugin
Tagtical is available both as a gem and as a traditional plugin. For the
traditional plugin you can install like so:
script/plugin install git://github.com/Mixbook/tagtical.git
==== Post Installation
1. script/generate tagtical_migration
2. rake db:migrate
=== Rails 3.0
To use it, add it to your Gemfile:
gem 'tagtical'
==== Post Installation
1. rails generate tagtical:migration
2. rake db:migrate
== Testing
Tagtical uses RSpec for its test coverage. Inside the plugin
directory, you can run the specs for RoR 3.0.0 with:
rake spec
Rails 2.3 is not supported, however I left the stub code from acts_as_taggable_on in there in case
someone wants to try to get it working:
rake rails2.3:spec
If you already have RSpec on your application, the specs will run while using:
rake spec:plugins
== Usage
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
# Alias for tagtical :tags:
acts_as_taggable :activities, :interests, :sports # top level, generic :tags is already included.
end
module Tag
class Activity < Tagtical::Tag
end
class Sport < Activity
def ball?
value=~/ball$/i
end
end
end
@user = User.new(:name => "Bobby")
@user.tag_list = "awesome, slick, hefty" # this should be familiar
@user.activity_list = "joking, clowning, boxing" # but you can do it for any context!
@user.activity_list # => ["joking","clowning","boxing"] as TagList
@user.save
@user.tags # => [,,]
@user.activities # => [,,]
@user.activities.first.athletic? # => false
@frankie = User.create(:name => "Frankie", :activity_list => "joking, flying, eating")
User.activity_counts # => [,...]
@frankie.activity_counts
@user.sport_list = {"boxing" => 4.5 # Since Sport's parent is Activity, it will move "boxing" down
# from Activity to Sport and give it a relevance of 4.5.
@user.save
@user.activities # => [,,]
@user.activities(:type => :children) # => [] - look at only the STI subclasses
@user.activities(:type => :<) # => [] - look at only the STI subclasses
@user.activities(:type => :current) # => [,] - look at only the current STI class
@user.activities(:type => :==) # => [,] - look at only the current STI class
@user.activities.first.athletic? # => false
@user.sports.all(&:ball?) # => true
--- Defining Subclasses
There is a lot of flexibility when it comes to naming subclasses. Lets say the type column had a value
of "color". You could define the subclass any of these ways:
module Tagtical
module Tag
class Color < Tagtical::Tag
end
end
end
module Tag
class Color < Tagtical::Tag
end
end
class Color < Tagtical::Tag
end
module Tagtical
module Tag
class ColorTag < Tagtical::Tag
end
end
end
module Tag
class ColorTag < Tagtical::Tag
end
end
class ColorTag < Tagtical::Tag
end
This allows for a wide range of folder structures. You could nest files (with corresponding models) like this:
app/models/tagtical/tag/color.rb
app/models/tag/color.rb
app/models/color.rb
app/models/tagtical/tag/color_tag.rb
app/models/tag/color_tag.rb
app/models/color_tag.rb
=== Finding Tagged Objects
Tagtical utilizes named_scopes to create an association for tags.
This way you can mix and match to filter down your results, and it also improves
compatibility with the will_paginate gem:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_taggable
named_scope :by_join_date, :order => "created_at DESC"
end
User.tagged_with("awesome").by_date
User.tagged_with("awesome").by_date.paginate(:page => params[:page], :per_page => 20)
# Find a user with matching all tags, not just one
User.tagged_with(["awesome", "cool"], :match_all => :true)
# Find a user with any of the tags:
User.tagged_with(["awesome", "cool"], :any => true)
=== Relationships
You can find objects of the same type based on similar tags on certain contexts.
Also, objects will be returned in descending order based on the total number of
matched tags.
@bobby = User.find_by_name("Bobby")
@bobby.activity_list # => ["jogging", "diving"]
@frankie = User.find_by_name("Frankie")
@frankie.activity_list # => ["hacking"]
@tom = User.find_by_name("Tom")
@tom.activity_list # => ["hacking", "jogging", "diving"]
@tom.find_related_activities # => [,]
@bobby.find_related_activities # => []
@frankie.find_related_activities # => []
=== Dynamic Tag Contexts
In addition to the generated tag contexts in the definition, it is also possible
to allow for dynamic tag contexts (this could be user generated tag contexts!)
@user = User.new(:name => "Bobby")
@user.set_tag_list_on(:customs, "same, as, tag, list")
@user.tag_list_on(:customs) # => ["same","as","tag","list"]
@user.save
@user.tags_on(:customs) # => [,...]
@user.tag_counts_on(:customs)
User.tagged_with("same", :on => :customs) # => [@user]
In the future, lets say you wanted to add additional methods for these specific tags. You would simply
just define the subclass and the code will automatically instantiate it as that class. Just do:
class CustomTag < Tagtical::Tag
def some_custom_function
end
end
Now moving forward, these classes will be instantiated with this model. Wow cool!
=== Tag Ownership
Tags can have owners:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_tagger
end
class Photo < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_taggable :locations
end
@some_user.tag(@some_photo, :with => "paris, normandy", :on => :locations)
@some_user.owned_taggings
@some_user.owned_tags
@some_photo.locations_from(@some_user)
=== Tag cloud calculations
To construct tag clouds, the frequency of each tag needs to be calculated.
Because we specified +tagtical+ on the User class, we can
get a calculation of all the tag counts by using User.tag_counts_on(:customs). But what if we wanted a tag count for
an single user's posts? To achieve this we call tag_counts on the association:
User.find(:first).posts.tag_counts_on(:tags)
A helper is included to assist with generating tag clouds.
Here is an example that generates a tag cloud.
Helper:
module PostsHelper
include Tagtical::TagsHelper
end
Controller:
class PostController < ApplicationController
def tag_cloud
@tags = Post.tag_counts_on(:tags)
end
end
View:
<% tag_cloud(@tags, %w(css1 css2 css3 css4)) do |tag, css_class| %>
<%= link_to tag.value, { :action => :tag, :id => tag.value }, :class => css_class %>
<% end %>
CSS:
.css1 { font-size: 1.0em; }
.css2 { font-size: 1.2em; }
.css3 { font-size: 1.4em; }
.css4 { font-size: 1.6em; }
== Contributors
* Aryk Grosz - Original Author
* Jonathan Nevelson - Taggable Scopes
== Contributors (from the acts_as_taggable_on project)
* TomEric (i76) - Maintainer
* Michael Bleigh - Original Author of acts_as_taggable_on
* Szymon Nowak - Rails 3.0 compatibility
* Jelle Vandebeeck - Rails 3.0 compatibility
* Brendan Lim - Related Objects
* Pradeep Elankumaran - Taggers
* Sinclair Bain - Patch King
=== Patch Contributors (from the acts_as_taggable_on project)
* tristanzdunn - Related objects of other classes
* azabaj - Fixed migrate down
* Peter Cooper - named_scope fix
* slainer68 - STI fix
* harrylove - migration instructions and fix-ups
* lawrencepit - cached tag work
* sobrinho - fixed tag_cloud helper
Copyright (c) 2011 Aryk Grosz (http://mixbook.com/) released under the MIT license