Module: ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper
- Extended by:
- ActiveSupport::Concern
- Includes:
- CaptureHelper, OutputSafetyHelper
- Included in:
- ActionView::Helpers, AssetTagHelper, AssetTagHelper::AssetIncludeTag, DateTimeSelector, InstanceTag, TextHelper, UrlHelper
- Defined in:
- lib/action_view/helpers/tag_helper.rb
Overview
Provides methods to generate HTML tags programmatically when you can’t use a Builder. By default, they output XHTML compliant tags.
Constant Summary collapse
- BOOLEAN_ATTRIBUTES =
%w(disabled readonly multiple checked autobuffer autoplay controls loop selected hidden scoped async defer reversed ismap seemless muted required autofocus novalidate formnovalidate open pubdate).to_set
- PRE_CONTENT_STRINGS =
{ :textarea => "\n" }
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#cdata_section(content) ⇒ Object
Returns a CDATA section with the given
content
. -
#content_tag(name, content_or_options_with_block = nil, options = nil, escape = true, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns an HTML block tag of type
name
surrounding thecontent
. -
#escape_once(html) ⇒ Object
Returns an escaped version of
html
without affecting existing escaped entities. -
#tag(name, options = nil, open = false, escape = true) ⇒ Object
Returns an empty HTML tag of type
name
which by default is XHTML compliant.
Methods included from OutputSafetyHelper
Methods included from CaptureHelper
#capture, #content_for, #content_for?, #flush_output_buffer, #provide, #with_output_buffer
Instance Method Details
#cdata_section(content) ⇒ Object
Returns a CDATA section with the given content
. CDATA sections are used to escape blocks of text containing characters which would otherwise be recognized as markup. CDATA sections begin with the string <![CDATA[
and end with (and may not contain) the string ]]>
.
Examples
cdata_section("<hello world>")
# => <![CDATA[<hello world>]]>
cdata_section(File.read("hello_world.txt"))
# => <![CDATA[<hello from a text file]]>
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/tag_helper.rb', line 113 def cdata_section(content) "<![CDATA[#{content}]]>".html_safe end |
#content_tag(name, content_or_options_with_block = nil, options = nil, escape = true, &block) ⇒ Object
Returns an HTML block tag of type name
surrounding the content
. Add HTML attributes by passing an attributes hash to options
. Instead of passing the content as an argument, you can also use a block in which case, you pass your options
as the second parameter. Set escape to false to disable attribute value escaping.
Options
The options
hash is used with attributes with no value like (disabled
and readonly
), which you can give a value of true in the options
hash. You can use symbols or strings for the attribute names.
Examples
content_tag(:p, "Hello world!")
# => <p>Hello world!</p>
content_tag(:div, content_tag(:p, "Hello world!"), :class => "strong")
# => <div class="strong"><p>Hello world!</p></div>
content_tag("select", options, :multiple => true)
# => <select multiple="multiple">...options...</select>
<%= content_tag :div, :class => "strong" do -%>
Hello world!
<% end -%>
# => <div class="strong">Hello world!</div>
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/tag_helper.rb', line 93 def content_tag(name, = nil, = nil, escape = true, &block) if block_given? = if .is_a?(Hash) content_tag_string(name, capture(&block), , escape) else content_tag_string(name, , , escape) end end |
#escape_once(html) ⇒ Object
Returns an escaped version of html
without affecting existing escaped entities.
Examples
escape_once("1 < 2 & 3")
# => "1 < 2 & 3"
escape_once("<< Accept & Checkout")
# => "<< Accept & Checkout"
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/tag_helper.rb', line 125 def escape_once(html) ActiveSupport::Multibyte.clean(html.to_s).gsub(/[\"><]|&(?!([a-zA-Z]+|(#\d+));)/) { |special| ERB::Util::HTML_ESCAPE[special] } end |
#tag(name, options = nil, open = false, escape = true) ⇒ Object
Returns an empty HTML tag of type name
which by default is XHTML compliant. Set open
to true to create an open tag compatible with HTML 4.0 and below. Add HTML attributes by passing an attributes hash to options
. Set escape
to false to disable attribute value escaping.
Options
You can use symbols or strings for the attribute names.
Use true
with boolean attributes that can render with no value, like disabled
and readonly
.
HTML5 data-*
attributes can be set with a single data
key pointing to a hash of sub-attributes.
To play nicely with JavaScript conventions sub-attributes are dasherized. For example, a key user_id
would render as data-user-id
and thus accessed as dataset.userId
.
Values are encoded to JSON, with the exception of strings and symbols. This may come in handy when using jQuery’s HTML5-aware <tt>.data()<tt> from 1.4.3.
Examples
tag("br")
# => <br />
tag("br", nil, true)
# => <br>
tag("input", :type => 'text', :disabled => true)
# => <input type="text" disabled="disabled" />
tag("img", :src => "open & shut.png")
# => <img src="open & shut.png" />
tag("img", {:src => "open & shut.png"}, false, false)
# => <img src="open & shut.png" />
tag("div", :data => {:name => 'Stephen', :city_state => %w(Chicago IL)})
# => <div data-name="Stephen" data-city-state="["Chicago","IL"]" />
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/tag_helper.rb', line 66 def tag(name, = nil, open = false, escape = true) "<#{name}#{(, escape) if }#{open ? ">" : " />"}".html_safe end |