Post Redirect Get pattern in Rails
How can I implement PRG in Rails?
I us开发者_开发问答ed PRG in Rails, but I am not totally convinced it's right. I was wondering is there any better way to handle it in Rails?
I don't know how popular PRG pattern is and why one has to religiously stick to the "redirect" on failure aspect of it (actually, one good reason is sometimes you dont want to deal with the "setup" complexity at create failure and keep things dry).
What you basically need is to transfer the params for :user to new. I think @Hitesh's solution above is quite close.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def new
if flash[:user_params]
@user = User.new(flash[:user_params])
@user.valid?
else
@user = User.new
end
end
def create
@user = User.new(params[:user])
if @user.save
# clears previously stored user if there is any
flash[:notice] = "User created."
redirect_to '/'
else
flash[:error] = "Error saving User"
flash[:user_params] = params[:user]
redirect_to :action => :new
end
end
end
Use the session, Luke
The way you implemented it in your blog post is quite fine, however you may want to use session
instead of flash
to store your @user
and optionally use the ActiveRecord session store to keep cookies from getting bloated.
From ActionController::Base documentation
ActiveRecord::SessionStore - Sessions are stored in your database, which works better than PStore with multiple app servers and, unlike CookieStore, hides your session contents from the user. To use ActiveRecord::SessionStore, set
config.action_controller.session_store = :active_record_store
in your
config/environment.rb
and runrake db:sessions:create
.
So you should…
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def new
@user = session[:user] || User.new
end
def create
@user = User.new(params[:user])
if @user.save
# clears previously stored user if there is any
session[:user] = nil
redirect_to '/'
else
session[:user] = @user
redirect_to :action => :new
end
end
end
I'm no expert in these matters, but this looks good. From what I understand flash is a part of the session. So the answers telling you to switch to session seem a bit misguided. In this case you want the data to be cleared after the redirect. Other than shoving it in the session, I'm not sure where you would put it.
As far as your cookie size increasing, well, the default session provider for Rails is a cookie in Rails 3. You could swap the session provider out if you wanted to keep the data server side. It is encrypted though, so you are probably okay with the data in the cookie, unless size is an issue.
use below code
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def new
@user = User.new(session[:user_param])
session[:user_param]=nil
end
def create
@user = User.new(params[:user])
if @user.save
# clears previously stored user if there is any
flash.discard(:user)
redirect_to '/'
else
session[:user_param] = @user
redirect_to :action => :new
end
end
end
It is true, though, that you should not do redirect_to '/'
. You should define root in your routes file and then do redirect_to root_path
.
Edit: Oops, that was supposed to be a comment to SpyrosP's answer.
Also: Here is some excellence guidance on flash. Particularly this may ease your mind:
The flash is a special part of the session which is cleared with each request. This means that values stored there will only be available in the next request, which is useful for storing error messages etc.
The interesting things there is that, yes it is a part of the session, so answers to "use the session instead of flash" are misguided, as Justin Etheredge's answer already put it. The other thing is that it says it is useful for storing messages instead of only for storing messages. With the added "etc" it would lead me to believe that it is within the intended usage to store user information in there as well.
One last thing, I would agree with Aditya Sanghi that you should just store the user parameters and not an entire user object in the flash.
I didn't read the question properly.
The validation failure you have necessitates going to a different page where a different process will occur. You tried to update a domain object, it doesn't exist. The usual response to a validation failure is to re-render the page, but you need to go to the create page.
The flash hash seems wrong for this. I'd agree with the idea of stuffing your entered data into the session and redirecting.
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