This code was not deprecated. What was deprecated is the following:
form_for(:foo, @foo)
Which now should be rewritten as:
form_for(@foo, :as => :foo)
The following format is valid:
form_for(:foo)
This reverts commit be797750e6.
* Specify accept-charset on all forms. All recent browsers,
as well as IE5+, will use the encoding specified for form
parameters
* Unfortunately, IE5+ will not look at accept-charset unless
at least one character in the form's values is not in the
page's charset. Since the user can override the default
charset (which Rails sets to UTF-8), we provide a hidden
input containing a unicode character, forcing IE to look
at the accept-charset.
* Now that the vast majority of web input is UTF-8, we set
the inbound parameters to UTF-8. This will eliminate many
cases of incompatible encodings between ASCII-8BIT and
UTF-8.
* You can safely ignore params[:_snowman_]
TODO:
* Validate inbound text to confirm it is UTF-8
* Combine the whole_form implementations in form_helper_test
and form_tag_helper_test
* The approach is to compile <% %> into a method call that checks whether
the value returned from a block is a String. If it is, it concats to the buffer and
prints a deprecation warning.
* <%= %> uses exactly the same logic to compile the template, which first checks
to see whether it's compiling a block.
* This should have no impact on other uses of block in templates. For instance, in
<% [1,2,3].each do |i| %><%= i %><% end %>, the call to each returns an Array,
not a String, so the result is not concatenated
* In two cases (#capture and #cache), a String can be returned that should *never*
be concatenated. We have temporarily created a String subclass called NonConcattingString
which behaves (and is serialized) identically to String, but is not concatenated
by the code that handles deprecated <% %> block helpers. Once we remove support
for <% %> block helpers, we can remove NonConcattingString.