Check out the full commit history at https://github.com/jcasimir/draper/compare/ad94f54369deabd11315fc241c66b74a30adec0a...04bb00505b7832419fddba20e5068317610eb38d
In summary, you can now:
* [Namespace the `decorates` call](https://github.com/jcasimir/draper/commit/1c3d5667b8406b80b490d876257379087b129f92)
* [Use your decorators with CanCan](https://github.com/jcasimir/draper/commit/ac1f3083989107d877e2b1c918c3a3e792db99e8)
* [Use a more generalized `options` hash in decorator initialization](https://github.com/jcasimir/draper/commit/03910877d0461356da0968a87346592908f292a7)
* [Get better performance by generating methods](https://github.com/jcasimir/draper/commit/ebe30511b79eac82276413ca7ae54a4a4d86d4dc)
* [Automatically decorate associated objects](https://github.com/jcasimir/draper/commit/1580baa287997ed4e356aae0ffeeb8fe9c326ced) See Example near bottom of Readme
Thanks to [steveklabnik](http://github.com/steveklabnik), [i0rek](http://github.com/i0rek), [laserlemon](http://github.com/laserlemon), [michaelfairley](http://github.com/michaelfairley), [dnagir](http://github.com/dnagir), [ubermajestix](http://github.com/ubermajestix), [tmaier](http://github.com/tmaier), [angelim](http://github.com/angelim), [duncanbeevers](http://github.com/duncanbeevers), Albert Peng & JR Boyens, [leocassarani](http://github.com/leocassarani), [Jeff Felchner](http://github.com/Felchner), [shingara](http://github.com/shingara), [momolog](http://github.com/momolog), and [ayamomiji](http://github.com/ayamomiji) for their contributions to this version!
Why hate normal helpers? In Ruby/Rails we approach everything from an Object-Oriented perspective, then with helpers we get procedural.The job of a helper is to take in data and output a presentation-ready string. We can do that with a decorator.
A decorator wraps an object with presentation-related accessor methods. For instance, if you had an `Article` object, then the decorator could override `.published_at` to use formatted output like this:
Or, in the course of formatting this data, did you wish you could access `current_user` down in the model? Maybe for guests your `to_json` is only going to show three attributes, but if the user is an admin they get to see them all.
How would you handle this in the model layer? You'd probably pass the `current_user` or some role/flag down to `to_json`. That should still feel slimy.
When you use a decorator you have the power of a Ruby object but it's a part of the view layer. This is where your `to_json` belongs. You can access your `current_user` helper method using the `h` proxy available in the decorator:
Open the decorator model (ex: `app/decorators/article_decorator.rb`) and add normal instance methods. To access the wrapped source object, use a method named after the `decorates` argument:
By default, specs in `spec/decorators` will be tagged as `type => :decorator`. Any spec tagged as `decorator` will run `ApplicationController.new.set_current_view_context` which makes helpers available to the decorator.
If your decorator specs live somewhere else, which they shouldn't, make sure to tag them with `type => :decorator`. If you don't tag them, Draper's helpers won't be available to your decorator while testing.
Say I have a publishing system with `Article` resources. My designer decides that whenever we print the `published_at` timestamp, it should be constructed like this:
```html
<spanclass='published_at'>
<spanclass='date'>Monday, May 6</span>
<spanclass='time'>8:52AM</span>
</span>
```
Could we build that using a partial? Yes. A helper? Uh-huh. But the point of the decorator is to encapsulate logic just like we would a method in our models. Here's how to implement it.
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