Module: Haml::Helpers
- Extended by:
- Helpers
- Includes:
- ActionViewExtensions
- Defined in:
- lib/haml/helpers.rb,
lib/haml/helpers/xss_mods.rb,
lib/haml/helpers/action_view_extensions.rb
Overview
This module contains various helpful methods to make it easier to do various tasks. Helpers is automatically included in the context that a Haml template is parsed in, so all these methods are at your disposal from within the template.
Defined Under Namespace
Modules: ActionViewExtensions, XssMods Classes: ErrorReturn
Constant Summary collapse
- HTML_ESCAPE =
Characters that need to be escaped to HTML entities from user input
{ '&'=>'&', '<'=>'<', '>'=>'>', '"'=>'"', "'"=>''', }
- @@action_view_defined =
true
Class Method Summary collapse
-
.action_view? ⇒ Boolean
Whether or not ActionView is loaded.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#block_is_haml?(block) ⇒ Boolean
Returns whether or not
block
is defined directly in a Haml template. -
#capture_haml(*args) {|args| ... }
Captures the result of a block of Haml code, gets rid of the excess indentation, and returns it as a string.
-
#escape_once(text) ⇒ String
Escapes HTML entities in
text
, but without escaping an ampersand that is already part of an escaped entity. -
#find_and_preserve(input = nil, tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve], &block)
Uses #preserve to convert any newlines inside whitespace-sensitive tags into the HTML entities for endlines.
-
#haml_concat(text = "")
Outputs text directly to the Haml buffer, with the proper indentation.
-
#haml_indent ⇒ String
The indentation string for the current line.
-
#haml_tag(name, *rest, &block)
Creates an HTML tag with the given name and optionally text and attributes.
-
#html_attrs(lang = 'en-US') ⇒ {#to_s => String}
Returns a hash containing default assignments for the
xmlns
,lang
, andxml:lang
attributes of thehtml
HTML element. -
#html_escape(text) ⇒ String
Returns a copy of
text
with ampersands, angle brackets and quotes escaped into HTML entities. -
#init_haml_helpers
Note: this does not need to be called when using Haml helpers normally in Rails.
-
#is_haml? ⇒ Boolean
Returns whether or not the current template is a Haml template.
-
#list_of(enum) {|item| ... }
Takes an
Enumerable
object and a block and iterates over the enum, yielding each element to a Haml block and putting the result into<li>
elements. -
#non_haml { ... }
Runs a block of code in a non-Haml context (i.e. #is_haml? will return false).
-
#precede(str) { ... }
Prepends a string to the beginning of a Haml block, with no whitespace between.
-
#preserve(input = nil, &block)
(also: #flatten)
Takes any string, finds all the newlines, and converts them to HTML entities so they'll render correctly in whitespace-sensitive tags without screwing up the indentation.
-
#succeed(str) { ... }
Appends a string to the end of a Haml block, with no whitespace between.
-
#surround(front, back = front) { ... }
Surrounds a block of Haml code with strings, with no whitespace in between.
-
#tab_down(i = 1)
Decrements the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds to the lines of the template.
-
#tab_up(i = 1)
Increments the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds to the lines of the template.
-
#with_tabs(i) { ... }
Sets the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds to the lines of the template, but only for the duration of the block.
Methods included from ActionViewExtensions
#page_class, #with_raw_haml_concat
Class Method Details
.action_view? ⇒ Boolean
Returns Whether or not ActionView is loaded.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 53
def self.action_view?
@@action_view_defined
end
|
Instance Method Details
#block_is_haml?(block) ⇒ Boolean
Returns whether or not block
is defined directly in a Haml template.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 539
def block_is_haml?(block)
eval('_hamlout', block.binding)
true
rescue
false
end
|
#capture_haml(*args) {|args| ... }
Captures the result of a block of Haml code, gets rid of the excess indentation, and returns it as a string. For example, after the following,
.foo
- foo = capture_haml(13) do |a|
%p= a
the local variable foo
would be assigned to "<p>13</p>\n"
.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 337
def capture_haml(*args, &block)
buffer = eval('_hamlout', block.binding) rescue haml_buffer
with_haml_buffer(buffer) do
position = haml_buffer.buffer.length
haml_buffer.capture_position = position
block.call(*args)
captured = haml_buffer.buffer.slice!(position..-1)
return captured if haml_buffer.options[:ugly]
captured = captured.split(/^/)
min_tabs = nil
captured.each do |line|
tabs = line.index(/[^ ]/) || line.length
min_tabs ||= tabs
min_tabs = min_tabs > tabs ? tabs : min_tabs
end
captured.map do |line|
line[min_tabs..-1]
end.join
end
ensure
haml_buffer.capture_position = nil
end
|
#escape_once(text) ⇒ String
Escapes HTML entities in text
, but without escaping an ampersand
that is already part of an escaped entity.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 518
def escape_once(text)
Haml::Util.silence_warnings do
text.to_s.gsub(/[\"><]|&(?!(?:[a-zA-Z]+|(#\d+));)/n) {|s| HTML_ESCAPE[s]}
end
end
|
#find_and_preserve(input, tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve]) #find_and_preserve(tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve]) { ... }
Uses #preserve to convert any newlines inside whitespace-sensitive tags into the HTML entities for endlines.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 108
def find_and_preserve(input = nil, tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve], &block)
return find_and_preserve(capture_haml(&block), input || tags) if block
input.to_s.gsub(/<(#{tags.map(&Regexp.method(:escape)).join('|')})([^>]*)>(.*?)(<\/\1>)/im) do
"<#{$1}#{$2}>#{preserve($3)}</#{$1}>"
end
end
|
#haml_concat(text = "")
Outputs text directly to the Haml buffer, with the proper indentation.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 367
def haml_concat(text = "")
unless haml_buffer.options[:ugly] || haml_indent == 0
haml_buffer.buffer << haml_indent <<
text.to_s.gsub("\n", "\n" + haml_indent) << "\n"
else
haml_buffer.buffer << text.to_s << "\n"
end
ErrorReturn.new("haml_concat")
end
|
#haml_indent ⇒ String
Returns The indentation string for the current line.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 378
def haml_indent
' ' * haml_buffer.tabulation
end
|
#haml_tag(name, *flags, attributes = {}) { ... } #haml_tag(name, text, *flags, attributes = {})
Creates an HTML tag with the given name and optionally text and attributes. Can take a block that will run between the opening and closing tags. If the block is a Haml block or outputs text using #haml_concat, the text will be properly indented.
name
can be a string using the standard Haml class/id shorthand
(e.g. "span#foo.bar", "#foo").
Just like standard Haml tags, these class and id values
will be merged with manually-specified attributes.
flags
is a list of symbol flags
like those that can be put at the end of a Haml tag
(:/
, :<
, and :>
).
Currently, only :/
and :<
are supported.
haml_tag
outputs directly to the buffer;
its return value should not be used.
If you need to get the results as a string,
use #capture_haml.
For example,
haml_tag :table do
haml_tag :tr do
haml_tag 'td.cell' do
haml_tag :strong, "strong!"
haml_concat "data"
end
haml_tag :td do
haml_concat "more_data"
end
end
end
outputs
<table>
<tr>
<td class='cell'>
<strong>
strong!
</strong>
data
</td>
<td>
more_data
</td>
</tr>
</table>
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 439
def haml_tag(name, *rest, &block)
ret = ErrorReturn.new("haml_tag")
text = rest.shift.to_s unless [Symbol, Hash, NilClass].any? {|t| rest.first.is_a? t}
flags = []
flags << rest.shift while rest.first.is_a? Symbol
attrs = Haml::Util.map_keys(rest.shift || {}) {|key| key.to_s}
name, attrs = merge_name_and_attributes(name.to_s, attrs)
attributes = Haml::Precompiler.build_attributes(haml_buffer.html?,
haml_buffer.options[:attr_wrapper],
attrs)
if text.nil? && block.nil? && (haml_buffer.options[:autoclose].include?(name) || flags.include?(:/))
haml_concat "<#{name}#{attributes} />"
return ret
end
if flags.include?(:/)
raise Error.new("Self-closing tags can't have content.") if text
raise Error.new("Illegal nesting: nesting within a self-closing tag is illegal.") if block
end
tag = "<#{name}#{attributes}>"
if block.nil?
text = text.to_s
if text.include?("\n")
haml_concat tag
tab_up
haml_concat text
tab_down
haml_concat "</#{name}>"
else
tag << text << "</#{name}>"
haml_concat tag
end
return ret
end
if text
raise Error.new("Illegal nesting: content can't be both given to haml_tag :#{name} and nested within it.")
end
if flags.include?(:<)
tag << capture_haml(&block).strip << "</#{name}>"
haml_concat tag
return ret
end
haml_concat tag
tab_up
block.call
tab_down
haml_concat "</#{name}>"
ret
end
|
#html_attrs(lang = 'en-US') ⇒ {#to_s => String}
Returns a hash containing default assignments for the xmlns
, lang
, and xml:lang
attributes of the html
HTML element.
For example,
%html{html_attrs}
becomes
<html xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml' xml:lang='en-US' lang='en-US'>
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 196
def html_attrs(lang = 'en-US')
{:xmlns => "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", 'xml:lang' => lang, :lang => lang}
end
|
#html_escape(text) ⇒ String
Returns a copy of text
with ampersands, angle brackets and quotes
escaped into HTML entities.
Note that if ActionView is loaded and XSS protection is enabled (as is the default for Rails 3.0+, and optional for version 2.3.5+), this won't escape text declared as "safe".
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 509
def html_escape(text)
Haml::Util.silence_warnings {text.to_s.gsub(/[\"><&]/n) {|s| HTML_ESCAPE[s]}}
end
|
#init_haml_helpers
Note: this does not need to be called when using Haml helpers normally in Rails.
Initializes the current object as though it were in the same context as a normal ActionView instance using Haml. This is useful if you want to use the helpers in a context other than the normal setup with ActionView. For example:
context = Object.new
class << context
include Haml::Helpers
end
context.init_haml_helpers
context.haml_tag :p, "Stuff"
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 73
def init_haml_helpers
@haml_buffer = Haml::Buffer.new(@haml_buffer, Haml::Engine.new('').send(:options_for_buffer))
nil
end
|
#is_haml? ⇒ Boolean
Returns whether or not the current template is a Haml template.
This function, unlike other Haml::Helpers functions,
also works in other ActionView
templates,
where it will always return false.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 531
def is_haml?
!@haml_buffer.nil? && @haml_buffer.active?
end
|
#list_of(enum) {|item| ... }
Takes an Enumerable
object and a block
and iterates over the enum,
yielding each element to a Haml block
and putting the result into <li>
elements.
This creates a list of the results of the block.
For example:
= list_of([['hello'], ['yall']]) do |i|
= i[0]
Produces:
<li>hello</li>
<li>yall</li>
And
= list_of({:title => 'All the stuff', :description => 'A book about all the stuff.'}) do |key, val|
%h3= key.humanize
%p= val
Produces:
<li>
<h3>Title</h3>
<p>All the stuff</p>
</li>
<li>
<h3>Description</h3>
<p>A book about all the stuff.</p>
</li>
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 168
def list_of(enum, &block)
to_return = enum.collect do |i|
result = capture_haml(i, &block)
if result.count("\n") > 1
result.gsub!("\n", "\n ")
result = "\n #{result.strip}\n"
else
result.strip!
end
"<li>#{result}</li>"
end
to_return.join("\n")
end
|
#non_haml { ... }
Runs a block of code in a non-Haml context (i.e. #is_haml? will return false).
This is mainly useful for rendering sub-templates such as partials in a non-Haml language, particularly where helpers may behave differently when run from Haml.
Note that this is automatically applied to Rails partials.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 87
def non_haml
was_active = @haml_buffer.active?
@haml_buffer.active = false
yield
ensure
@haml_buffer.active = was_active
end
|
#precede(str) { ... }
Prepends a string to the beginning of a Haml block, with no whitespace between. For example:
= precede '*' do
%span.small Not really
Produces:
*<span class='small'>Not really</span>
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 300
def precede(str, &block)
"#{str}#{capture_haml(&block).chomp}\n"
end
|
#perserve(input) #perserve { ... } Also known as: flatten
Takes any string, finds all the newlines, and converts them to HTML entities so they'll render correctly in whitespace-sensitive tags without screwing up the indentation.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 127
def preserve(input = nil, &block)
return preserve(capture_haml(&block)) if block
input.to_s.chomp("\n").gsub(/\n/, '
').gsub(/\r/, '')
end
|
#succeed(str) { ... }
Appends a string to the end of a Haml block, with no whitespace between. For example:
click
= succeed '.' do
%a{:href=>"thing"} here
Produces:
click
<a href='thing'>here</a>.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 319
def succeed(str, &block)
"#{capture_haml(&block).chomp}#{str}\n"
end
|
#surround(front, back = front) { ... }
Surrounds a block of Haml code with strings, with no whitespace in between. For example:
= surround '(', ')' do
%a{:href => "food"} chicken
Produces:
(<a href='food'>chicken</a>)
and
= surround '*' do
%strong angry
Produces:
*<strong>angry</strong>*
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 281
def surround(front, back = front, &block)
output = capture_haml(&block)
"#{front}#{output.chomp}#{back}\n"
end
|
#tab_down(i = 1)
Decrements the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds to the lines of the template.
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 227
def tab_down(i = 1)
haml_buffer.tabulation -= i
end
|
#tab_up(i = 1)
Increments the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds to the lines of the template. For example:
%h1 foo
- tab_up
%p bar
- tab_down
%strong baz
Produces:
<h1>foo</h1>
<p>bar</p>
<strong>baz</strong>
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 218
def tab_up(i = 1)
haml_buffer.tabulation += i
end
|
#with_tabs(i) { ... }
Sets the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds to the lines of the template, but only for the duration of the block. For example:
%h1 foo
- with_tabs(2) do
%p bar
%strong baz
Produces:
<h1>foo</h1>
<p>bar</p>
<strong>baz</strong>
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# File 'lib/haml/helpers.rb', line 250
def with_tabs(i)
old_tabs = haml_buffer.tabulation
haml_buffer.tabulation = i
yield
ensure
haml_buffer.tabulation = old_tabs
end
|