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Update README, extra kaminari methods delegation.
587 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
587 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
# Draper: View Models for Rails
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[![TravisCI Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/drapergem/draper.svg?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/drapergem/draper)
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[![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/drapergem/draper.png)](https://codeclimate.com/github/drapergem/draper)
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[![Inline docs](http://inch-ci.org/github/drapergem/draper.png?branch=master)](http://inch-ci.org/github/drapergem/draper)
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Draper adds an object-oriented layer of presentation logic to your Rails
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application.
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Without Draper, this functionality might have been tangled up in procedural
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helpers or adding bulk to your models. With Draper decorators, you can wrap your
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models with presentation-related logic to organise - and test - this layer of
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your app much more effectively.
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## Why Use a Decorator?
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Imagine your application has an `Article` model. With Draper, you'd create a
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corresponding `ArticleDecorator`. The decorator wraps the model, and deals
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*only* with presentational concerns. In the controller, you decorate the article
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before handing it off to the view:
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```ruby
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# app/controllers/articles_controller.rb
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def show
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@article = Article.find(params[:id]).decorate
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end
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```
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In the view, you can use the decorator in exactly the same way as you would have
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used the model. But whenever you start needing logic in the view or start
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thinking about a helper method, you can implement a method on the decorator
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instead.
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Let's look at how you could convert an existing Rails helper to a decorator
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method. You have this existing helper:
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```ruby
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# app/helpers/articles_helper.rb
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def publication_status(article)
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if article.published?
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"Published at #{article.published_at.strftime('%A, %B %e')}"
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else
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"Unpublished"
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end
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end
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```
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But it makes you a little uncomfortable. `publication_status` lives in a
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nebulous namespace spread across all controllers and view. Down the road, you
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might want to display the publication status of a `Book`. And, of course, your
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design calls for a slighly different formatting to the date for a `Book`.
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Now your helper method can either switch based on the input class type (poor
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Ruby style), or you break it out into two methods, `book_publication_status` and
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`article_publication_status`. And keep adding methods for each publication
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type...to the global helper namespace. And you'll have to remember all the names. Ick.
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Ruby thrives when we use Object-Oriented style. If you didn't know Rails'
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helpers existed, you'd probably imagine that your view template could feature
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something like this:
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```erb
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<%= @article.publication_status %>
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```
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Without a decorator, you'd have to implement the `publication_status` method in
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the `Article` model. That method is presentation-centric, and thus does not
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belong in a model.
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Instead, you implement a decorator:
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```ruby
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# app/decorators/article_decorator.rb
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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delegate_all
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def publication_status
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if published?
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"Published at #{published_at}"
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else
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"Unpublished"
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end
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end
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def published_at
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object.published_at.strftime("%A, %B %e")
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end
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end
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```
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Within the `publication_status` method we use the `published?` method. Where
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does that come from? It's a method of the source `Article`, whose methods have
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been made available on the decorator by the `delegate_all` call above.
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You might have heard this sort of decorator called a "presenter", an "exhibit",
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a "view model", or even just a "view" (in that nomenclature, what Rails calls
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"views" are actually "templates"). Whatever you call it, it's a great way to
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replace procedural helpers like the one above with "real" object-oriented
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programming.
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Decorators are the ideal place to:
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* format complex data for user display
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* define commonly-used representations of an object, like a `name` method that
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combines `first_name` and `last_name` attributes
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* mark up attributes with a little semantic HTML, like turning a `url` field
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into a hyperlink
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## Installation
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Add Draper to your Gemfile:
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```ruby
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gem 'draper', '~> 1.3'
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```
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And run `bundle install` within your app's directory.
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If you're upgrading from a 0.x release, the major changes are outlined [in the
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wiki](https://github.com/drapergem/draper/wiki/Upgrading-to-1.0).
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## Writing Decorators
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Decorators inherit from `Draper::Decorator`, live in your `app/decorators`
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directory, and are named for the model that they decorate:
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```ruby
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# app/decorators/article_decorator.rb
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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# ...
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end
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```
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### Generators
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When you have Draper installed and generate a controller...
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```
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rails generate resource Article
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```
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...you'll get a decorator for free!
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But if the `Article` model already exists, you can run...
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```
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rails generate decorator Article
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```
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...to create the `ArticleDecorator`.
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### Accessing Helpers
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Normal Rails helpers are still useful for lots of tasks. Both Rails' provided
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helpers and those defined in your app can be accessed within a decorator via the `h` method:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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def emphatic
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h.content_tag(:strong, "Awesome")
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end
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end
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```
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If writing `h.` frequently is getting you down, you can add...
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```
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include Draper::LazyHelpers
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```
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...at the top of your decorator class - you'll mix in a bazillion methods and
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never have to type `h.` again.
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(*Note*: the `capture` method is only available through `h` or `helpers`)
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### Accessing the model
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When writing decorator methods you'll usually need to access the wrapped model.
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While you may choose to use delegation ([covered below](#delegating-methods))
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for convenience, you can always use the `object` (or its alias `model`):
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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def published_at
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object.published_at.strftime("%A, %B %e")
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end
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end
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```
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## Decorating Objects
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### Single Objects
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Ok, so you've written a sweet decorator, now you're going to want to put it into
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action! A simple option is to call the `decorate` method on your model:
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```ruby
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@article = Article.first.decorate
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```
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This infers the decorator from the object being decorated. If you want more
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control - say you want to decorate a `Widget` with a more general
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`ProductDecorator` - then you can instantiate a decorator directly:
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```ruby
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@widget = ProductDecorator.new(Widget.first)
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# or, equivalently
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@widget = ProductDecorator.decorate(Widget.first)
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```
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### Collections
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#### Decorating Individual Elements
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If you have a collection of objects, you can decorate them all in one fell
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swoop:
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```ruby
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@articles = ArticleDecorator.decorate_collection(Article.all)
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```
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If your collection is an ActiveRecord query, you can use this:
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```ruby
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@articles = Article.popular.decorate
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```
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*Note:* In Rails 3, the `.all` method returns an array and not a query. Thus you
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_cannot_ use the technique of `Article.all.decorate` in Rails 3. In Rails 4,
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`.all` returns a query so this techique would work fine.
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#### Decorating the Collection Itself
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If you want to add methods to your decorated collection (for example, for
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pagination), you can subclass `Draper::CollectionDecorator`:
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```ruby
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# app/decorators/articles_decorator.rb
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class ArticlesDecorator < Draper::CollectionDecorator
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def page_number
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42
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end
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end
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# elsewhere...
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@articles = ArticlesDecorator.new(Article.all)
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# or, equivalently
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@articles = ArticlesDecorator.decorate(Article.all)
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```
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Draper decorates each item by calling the `decorate` method. Alternatively, you can
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specify a decorator by overriding the collection decorator's `decorator_class`
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method, or by passing the `:with` option to the constructor.
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#### Using pagination
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Some pagination gems add methods to `ActiveRecord::Relation`. For example,
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[Kaminari](https://github.com/amatsuda/kaminari)'s `paginate` helper method
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requires the collection to implement `current_page`, `total_pages`, and
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`limit_value`. To expose these on a collection decorator, you can delegate to
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the `object`:
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```ruby
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class PaginatingDecorator < Draper::CollectionDecorator
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delegate :current_page, :total_pages, :limit_value, :entry_name, :total_count, :offset_value, :last_page?
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end
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```
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The `delegate` method used here is the same as that added by [Active
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Support](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/Module.html#method-i-delegate),
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except that the `:to` option is not required; it defaults to `:object` when
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omitted.
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[will_paginate](https://github.com/mislav/will_paginate) needs the following delegations:
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```ruby
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delegate :current_page, :per_page, :offset, :total_entries, :total_pages
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```
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### Decorating Associated Objects
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You can automatically decorate associated models when the primary model is
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decorated. Assuming an `Article` model has an associated `Author` object:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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decorates_association :author
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end
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```
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When `ArticleDecorator` decorates an `Article`, it will also use
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`AuthorDecorator` to decorate the associated `Author`.
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### Decorated Finders
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You can call `decorates_finders` in a decorator...
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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decorates_finders
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end
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```
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...which allows you to then call all the normal ActiveRecord-style finders on
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your `ArticleDecorator` and they'll return decorated objects:
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```ruby
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@article = ArticleDecorator.find(params[:id])
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```
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### When to Decorate Objects
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Decorators are supposed to behave very much like the models they decorate, and
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for that reason it is very tempting to just decorate your objects at the start
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of your controller action and then use the decorators throughout. *Don't*.
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Because decorators are designed to be consumed by the view, you should only be
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accessing them there. Manipulate your models to get things ready, then decorate
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at the last minute, right before you render the view. This avoids many of the
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common pitfalls that arise from attempting to modify decorators (in particular,
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collection decorators) after creating them.
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To help you make your decorators read-only, we have the `decorates_assigned`
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method in your controller. It adds a helper method that returns the decorated
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version of an instance variable:
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```ruby
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# app/controllers/articles_controller.rb
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class ArticlesController < ApplicationController
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decorates_assigned :article
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def show
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@article = Article.find(params[:id])
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end
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end
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```
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The `decorates_assigned :article` bit is roughly equivalent to
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```ruby
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def article
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@decorated_article ||= @article.decorate
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end
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helper_method :article
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```
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This means that you can just replace `@article` with `article` in your views and
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you'll have access to an ArticleDecorator object instead. In your controller you
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can continue to use the `@article` instance variable to manipulate the model -
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for example, `@article.comments.build` to add a new blank comment for a form.
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## Testing
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Draper supports RSpec, MiniTest::Rails, and Test::Unit, and will add the
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appropriate tests when you generate a decorator.
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### RSpec
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Your specs are expected to live in `spec/decorators`. If you use a different
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path, you need to tag them with `type: :decorator`.
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In a controller spec, you might want to check whether your instance variables
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are being decorated properly. You can use the handy predicate matchers:
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```ruby
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assigns(:article).should be_decorated
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# or, if you want to be more specific
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assigns(:article).should be_decorated_with ArticleDecorator
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```
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Note that `model.decorate == model`, so your existing specs shouldn't break when
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you add the decoration.
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#### Spork Users
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In your `Spork.prefork` block of `spec_helper.rb`, add this:
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```ruby
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require 'draper/test/rspec_integration'
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```
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### Isolated Tests
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In tests, Draper needs to build a view context to access helper methods. By
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default, it will create an `ApplicationController` and then use its view
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context. If you are speeding up your test suite by testing each component in
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isolation, you can eliminate this dependency by putting the following in your
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`spec_helper` or similar:
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```ruby
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Draper::ViewContext.test_strategy :fast
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```
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In doing so, your decorators will no longer have access to your application's
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helpers. If you need to selectively include such helpers, you can pass a block:
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```ruby
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Draper::ViewContext.test_strategy :fast do
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include ApplicationHelper
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end
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```
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#### Stubbing Route Helper Functions
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If you are writing isolated tests for Draper methods that call route helper
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methods, you can stub them instead of needing to require Rails.
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If you are using RSpec, minitest-rails, or the Test::Unit syntax of minitest,
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you already have access to the Draper `helpers` in your tests since they
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inherit from `Draper::TestCase`. If you are using minitest's spec syntax
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without minitest-rails, you can explicitly include the Draper `helpers`:
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```ruby
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describe YourDecorator do
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include Draper::ViewHelpers
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end
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```
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Then you can stub the specific route helper functions you need using your
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preferred stubbing technique (this example uses RSpec's `stub` method):
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```ruby
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helpers.stub(users_path: '/users')
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```
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## Advanced usage
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### Shared Decorator Methods
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You might have several decorators that share similar needs. Since decorators are
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just Ruby objects, you can use any normal Ruby technique for sharing
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functionality.
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In Rails controllers, common functionality is organized by having all
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controllers inherit from `ApplicationController`. You can apply this same
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pattern to your decorators:
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```ruby
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# app/decorators/application_decorator.rb
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class ApplicationDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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# ...
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end
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```
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Then modify your decorators to inherit from that `ApplicationDecorator` instead
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of directly from `Draper::Decorator`:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < ApplicationDecorator
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# decorator methods
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end
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```
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### Delegating Methods
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When your decorator calls `delegate_all`, any method called on the decorator not
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defined in the decorator itself will be delegated to the decorated object. This
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is a very permissive interface.
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If you want to strictly control which methods are called within views, you can
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choose to only delegate certain methods from the decorator to the source model:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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delegate :title, :body
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end
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```
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We omit the `:to` argument here as it defaults to the `object` being decorated.
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You could choose to delegate methods to other places like this:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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delegate :title, :body
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delegate :name, :title, to: :author, prefix: true
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end
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```
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From your view template, assuming `@article` is decorated, you could do any of
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the following:
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```ruby
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@article.title # Returns the article's `.title`
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@article.body # Returns the article's `.body`
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@article.author_name # Returns the article's `author.name`
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@article.author_title # Returns the article's `author.title`
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```
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### Adding Context
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If you need to pass extra data to your decorators, you can use a `context` hash.
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Methods that create decorators take it as an option, for example:
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```ruby
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Article.first.decorate(context: {role: :admin})
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```
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The value passed to the `:context` option is then available in the decorator
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through the `context` method.
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If you use `decorates_association`, the context of the parent decorator is
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passed to the associated decorators. You can override this with the `:context`
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option:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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decorates_association :author, context: {foo: "bar"}
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end
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```
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or, if you want to modify the parent's context, use a lambda that takes a hash
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and returns a new hash:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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decorates_association :author,
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context: ->(parent_context){ parent_context.merge(foo: "bar") }
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end
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```
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### Specifying Decorators
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When you're using `decorates_association`, Draper uses the `decorate` method on
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the associated record(s) to perform the decoration. If you want use a specific
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decorator, you can use the `:with` option:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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decorates_association :author, with: FancyPersonDecorator
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end
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```
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For a collection association, you can specify a `CollectionDecorator` subclass,
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which is applied to the whole collection, or a singular `Decorator` subclass,
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which is applied to each item individually.
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### Scoping Associations
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If you want your decorated association to be ordered, limited, or otherwise
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scoped, you can pass a `:scope` option to `decorates_association`, which will be
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applied to the collection *before* decoration:
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```ruby
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class ArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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decorates_association :comments, scope: :recent
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end
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```
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### Proxying Class Methods
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If you want to proxy class methods to the wrapped model class, including when
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|
using `decorates_finders`, Draper needs to know the model class. By default, it
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assumes that your decorators are named `SomeModelDecorator`, and then attempts
|
|
to proxy unknown class methods to `SomeModel`.
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|
|
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If your model name can't be inferred from your decorator name in this way, you
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|
need to use the `decorates` method:
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|
|
|
```ruby
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class MySpecialArticleDecorator < Draper::Decorator
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|
decorates :article
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|
end
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|
```
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|
|
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This is only necessary when proxying class methods.
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|
|
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### Making Models Decoratable
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|
|
|
Models get their `decorate` method from the `Draper::Decoratable` module, which
|
|
is included in `ActiveRecord::Base` and `Mongoid::Document` by default. If
|
|
you're [using another
|
|
ORM](https://github.com/drapergem/draper/wiki/Using-other-ORMs) (including
|
|
versions of Mongoid prior to 3.0), or want to decorate plain old Ruby objects,
|
|
you can include this module manually.
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|
|
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## Contributors
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|
|
|
Draper was conceived by Jeff Casimir and heavily refined by Steve Klabnik and a
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|
great community of open source
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|
[contributors](https://github.com/drapergem/draper/contributors).
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|
|
|
### Core Team
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|
|
|
* Jeff Casimir (jeff@jumpstartlab.com)
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|
* Steve Klabnik (steve@jumpstartlab.com)
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|
* Vasiliy Ermolovich
|
|
* Andrew Haines
|