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Description

Has scope allows you to map incoming controller parameters to named scopes in your resources. Imagine the following model called graduations:

Code Quality Rank: L5
Monthly Downloads: 911,199
Programming language: Ruby
License: MIT License
Tags: Search    
Latest version: v0.8.0

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README

HasScope

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Has scope allows you to map incoming controller parameters to named scopes in your resources. Imagine the following model called graduations:

class Graduation < ActiveRecord::Base
  scope :featured, -> { where(featured: true) }
  scope :by_degree, -> degree { where(degree: degree) }
  scope :by_period, -> started_at, ended_at { where("started_at = ? AND ended_at = ?", started_at, ended_at) }
end

You can use those named scopes as filters by declaring them on your controller:

class GraduationsController < ApplicationController
  has_scope :featured, type: :boolean
  has_scope :by_degree
end

Now, if you want to apply them to an specific resource, you just need to call apply_scopes:

class GraduationsController < ApplicationController
  has_scope :featured, type: :boolean
  has_scope :by_degree
  has_scope :by_period, using: %i[started_at ended_at], type: :hash

  def index
    @graduations = apply_scopes(Graduation).all
  end
end

Then for each request:

/graduations
#=> acts like a normal request

/graduations?featured=true
#=> calls the named scope and bring featured graduations

/graduations?by_period[started_at]=20100701&by_period[ended_at]=20101013
#=> brings graduations in the given period

/graduations?featured=true&by_degree=phd
#=> brings featured graduations with phd degree

You can retrieve all the scopes applied in one action with current_scopes method. In the last case, it would return: { featured: true, by_degree: 'phd' }.

Installation

Add has_scope to your Gemfile or install it from Rubygems.

gem 'has_scope'

Options

HasScope supports several options:

  • :type - Checks the type of the parameter sent. By default, it does not allow hashes or arrays to be given, except if type :hash or :array are set. Symbols are never permitted to prevent memory leaks, so ensure any routing constraints you have that add parameters use string values.

  • :only - In which actions the scope is applied.

  • :except - In which actions the scope is not applied.

  • :as - The key in the params hash expected to find the scope. Defaults to the scope name.

  • :using - The subkeys to be used as args when type is a hash.

  • :in - A shortcut for combining the :using option with nested hashes.

  • :if - Specifies a method or proc to call to determine if the scope should apply. Passing a string is deprecated and it will be removed in a future version.

  • :unless - Specifies a method or proc to call to determine if the scope should NOT apply. Passing a string is deprecated and it will be removed in a future version.

  • :default - Default value for the scope. Whenever supplied the scope is always called.

  • :allow_blank - Blank values are not sent to scopes by default. Set to true to overwrite.

Boolean usage

If type: :boolean is set it just calls the named scope, without any arguments, when parameter is set to a "true" value. 'true' and '1' are parsed as true, everything else as false.

When boolean scope is set up with allow_blank: true, it will call the scope with the value as any usual scope.

has_scope :visible, type: :boolean
has_scope :active, type: :boolean, allow_blank: true

# and models with
scope :visible, -> { where(visible: true) }
scope :active, ->(value = true) { where(active: value) }

Note: it is not possible to apply a boolean scope with just the query param being present, e.g. ?active, that's not considered a "true" value (the param value will be nil), and thus the scope will be called with false as argument. In order for the scope to receive a true argument the param value must be set to one of the "true" values above, e.g. ?active=true or ?active=1.

Block usage

has_scope also accepts a block. The controller, current scope and value are yielded to the block so the user can apply the scope on its own. This is useful in case we need to manipulate the given value:

has_scope :category do |controller, scope, value|
  value != 'all' ? scope.by_category(value) : scope
end

When used with booleans without :allow_blank, it just receives two arguments and is just invoked if true is given:

has_scope :not_voted_by_me, type: :boolean do |controller, scope|
  scope.not_voted_by(controller.current_user.id)
end

Keyword arguments

Scopes with keyword arguments need to be called in a block:

# in the model
scope :for_course, lambda { |course_id:| where(course_id: course_id) }

# in the controller
has_scope :for_course do |controller, scope, value|
  scope.for_course(course_id: value)
end

Apply scope on every request

To apply scope on every request set default value and allow_blank: true:

has_scope :available, default: nil, allow_blank: true, only: :show, unless: :admin?

# model:
scope :available, ->(*) { where(blocked: false) }

This will allow usual users to get only available items, but admins will be able to access blocked items too.

Check which scopes have been applied

To check which scopes have been applied, you can call current_scopes from the controller or view. This returns a hash with the scope name as the key and the scope value as the value.

For example, if a boolean :active scope has been applied, current_scopes will return { active: true }.

Supported Ruby / Rails versions

We intend to maintain support for all Ruby / Rails versions that haven't reached end-of-life.

For more information about specific versions please check Ruby and Rails maintenance policies, and our test matrix.

Bugs and Feedback

If you discover any bugs or want to drop a line, feel free to create an issue on GitHub.

MIT License. Copyright 2009-2019 Plataformatec. http://blog.plataformatec.com.br


*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the has_scope README section above are relevant to that project's source code only.