/high_voltage

Easily include static pages in your Rails app.

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

High Voltage Build Status

Rails engine for static pages.

... but be careful. Danger!

Static pages?

Yeah, like "About us", "Directions", marketing pages, etc.

Installation

$ gem install high_voltage

Include in your Gemfile:

gem "high_voltage"

For Rails versions prior to 3.0, use the 0.9.2 tag of high_voltage:

https://github.com/thoughtbot/high_voltage/tree/v0.9.2

Usage

Write your static pages and put them in the RAILS_ROOT/app/views/pages directory.

$ mkdir app/views/pages
$ touch app/views/pages/about.html.erb

After putting something interesting there, you can link to it from anywhere in your app with:

link_to "About", page_path("about")

This will also work, if you like the more explicit style:

link_to "About", page_path(:id => "about")

You can nest pages in a directory structure, if that makes sense from a URL perspective for you:

link_to "Q4 Reports", page_path("about/corporate/policies/HR/en_US/biz/sales/Quarter-Four")

Bam.

Routes

By default, the static page routes will be like /pages/:id (where :id is the view filename).

If you want to route to a static page in another location (for example, a homepage), do this:

match 'pages/home' => 'high_voltage/pages#show', :id => 'home'

In that case, you'd need an app/views/pages/home.html.erb file.

Generally speaking, you need to route to the 'show' action with an :id param of the view filename.

High Voltage will generate a named route method of page_path which you can use, as well. If you want to generate a named route (with the :as routing option) for some route which will be handled by High Voltage, make sure not to use :page as the name, because that will conflict with the named route generated by High Voltage itself. For example, this will work for top-level routes (we will get a named route called static_path which does not conflict with the generated page_path method):

match '/:id' => 'high_voltage/pages#show', :as => :static, :via => :get

You can route the root url to a high voltage page like this:

root :to => 'high_voltage/pages#show', :id => 'home'

Which will render a homepage from app/views/pages/home.html.erb

Customize

High Voltage uses a default path and folder of 'pages', i.e. 'url.com/pages/contact' , 'app/views/pages'

You can change this in an initializer:

HighVoltage.content_path = "site/"

Override

Most common reasons to override?

  • You need authentication around the pages to make sure a user is signed in.
  • You need to render different layouts for different pages.
  • You need to render a partial from the app/views/pages directory.

Create a PagesController of your own:

$ rails generate controller pages

Override the default route:

# in config/routes.rb
match "/pages/*id" => 'pages#show', :as => :page, :format => false

Then modify it to subclass from High Voltage, adding whatever you need:

class PagesController < HighVoltage::PagesController
  before_filter :authenticate
  layout :layout_for_page

  protected
    def layout_for_page
      case params[:id]
      when 'home'
        'home'
      else
        'application'
      end
    end
end

Testing

Just a suggestion, but you can test your pages using Shoulda pretty easily:

class PagesControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
  tests PagesController

  %w(earn_money screencast about contact).each do |page|
    context "on GET to /pages/#{page}" do
      setup { get :show, :id => page }

      should_respond_with :success
      should_render_template page
    end
  end
end

If you're not using a custom PagesController be sure to test HighVoltage::PagesController instead.

Enjoy!

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for details.

Credits

thoughtbot

High Voltage is maintained and funded by thoughtbot, inc

Thank you to all the contributors!

The names and logos for thoughtbot are trademarks of thoughtbot, inc.

License

High Voltage is Copyright © 2009-2011 thoughtbot. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the MIT-LICENSE file.