Crummy is a simple and tasty way to add breadcrumbs to your Rails applications.
Simply add the dependency to your Gemfile:
gem "crummy", "~> 1.8.0"
In your controllers you may add_crumb either like a before_filter or within a method (It is also available to views).
class ApplicationController
add_crumb "Home", '/'
end
class BusinessController < ApplicationController
add_crumb("Businesses") { |instance| instance.send :businesses_path }
add_crumb("Comments", only: "comments") { |instance| instance.send :businesses_comments_path }
before_filter :load_comment, only: "show"
add_crumb :comment, only: "show"
# Example for nested routes:
add_crumb(:document) { [:account, :document] }
def show
add_crumb @business.display_name, @business
end
def load_comment
@comment = Comment.find(params[:id])
end
end
Then in your view:
<%= render_crumbs %>
You can set the html options with link_html_options. These are added to the a tag.
add_crumb "Home", '/', link_html_options: {title: "my link title"}
##You can set html instead text in first parameter.
If tag a
present in this html, tag a not be a wrapper.
add_crumb "<a class='glyphicons shield' href='/support'><i></i>Support</a>".html_safe, "", {}
render_crumbs
renders the list of crumbs as either html or xml
The output format. Can either be :xml or :html or :html_list. Defaults to :html
format: (:html|:html_list|:xml)
The separator text. It does not assume you want spaces on either side so
you must specify. Defaults to »
for :html and
<crumb>
for :xml
separator: string
Render links in the output. Defaults to true
links: false
Render Richsnipet Default to false
microdata: true
Optionally disable linking of the last crumb, Defaults to true
last_crumb_linked: false
With this option, output will be blank if there are no breadcrumbs.
skip_if_blank: true
render_crumbs #=> <a href="/">Home</a> » <a href="/businesses">Businesses</a>
render_crumbs separator: ' | ' #=> <a href="/">Home</a> | <a href="/businesses">Businesses</a>
render_crumbs format: :xml #=> <crumb href="/">Home</crumb><crumb href="/businesses">Businesses</crumb>
render_crumbs format: :html_list #=> <ul class="" id=""><li class=""><a href="/">Home</a></li><li class=""><a href="/">Businesses</a></li></ul>
render_crumbs format: :html_list, :microdata => true
#=> <ul class="" id=""><li class="" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Breadcrumb">
# <a href="/" itemprop="url"><span itemprop="title">Home</span></a></li></ul>
add_crumb support_link, {:right_side => true, :links => "/support", :li_right_class => "pull-right hidden-phone"}
#=> <li class="pull-right hidden-phone">
#=> <span><a class="glyphicons shield" href="/support">
#=> <i></i>Support</a>
#=> </span>
#=> </li>
#=> <li class="divider pull-right hidden-phone"></li>
A crumb with a nil argument for the link will output an unlinked crumb.
With format: :html_list
you can specify additional params: :li_class, :ul_class, :ul_id
You have the option to pre-configure any of the Crummy options in an
application-wide configuration. The options above are available to
configure, with the exception of :separator
, as well as many others.
The biggest difference is that :separator
is not an option. Instead,
you have format-specific configuration options: :html_separator
,
:xml_separator
, and :html_list_separator
. :separator
can still be
overridden in the view.
Insert the following in a file named config/initializers/crummy.rb
:
Crummy.configure do |config|
config.format = :xml
end
Possible parameters for configuration are:
:format
:links
:skip_if_blank
:html_separator
:xml_separator
:html_list_separator
:html_list_right_separator
:first_class
:last_class
:ul_id
:ul_class
:li_class
:li_right_class
:microdata
:last_crumb_linked
:truncate
:right_side
See lib/crummy.rb
for a list of these parameters and their defaults.
###Individually for each crumb configuration:
add_crumb support_link, {:right_side => true, :links => "/support", : li_class => "my_class", :li_right_class => "pull-right hidden-phone"}
Simple add that parameter to options hash.
An example application is available right inside this gem. That application is documented, see example/README
for details about usage.
- Accept collections of models as a single argument
- Accept instances of models as a single argument
- Allow for variables in names. (The workaround is to do your own before_filter for that currently)
- Make a crumbs? type method
- Zach Inglis of Superhero Studios
- Andrew Nesbitt
- Rein Henrichs
- Les Hill
- Sandro Turriate
- Przemysław
Kowalczyk
- feature ideas
- Sharad Jain
- Max Riveiro
- Kamil K. Lemański
- Brian Cobb
- Kir Shatrov (Evrone company)
- sugilog
- Trond Arve Nordheim
- Jan Szumiec
- Jeff Browning
- Bill Turner
Copyright 2008-2013 Zach Inglis, released under the MIT license