Gem for generating .odt files by making strings, images, tables and sections replacements in a previously created .odt file.
ODF-REPORT have been internally refactored. It now uses Nokogiri for parsing the documents, instead of Regex. This provides for a much greater flexibility. As a result, it was possible to implement nested sections and tables. Now sections can be nested inside sections, with fields, tables and others sections And now, tables can also be nested inside tables.
(sudo) gem install odf-report
First of all, you need to create a .odt file to serve as a template
Templates are normal .odt files with placeholders for Substitutions
There are now four kinds of substitutions available: fields, tables, images and sections.
It’s just an upcase sentence, surrounded by brackets. It will be replaced for wathever value you supply.
In the folowing example:
report = ODFReport::Report.new("Users/john/my_template.odt") do |r| r.add_field :user_name, @user.name r.add_field :address, "My new address" end
All occurences of [USER_NAME]
found in the file will be replaced by the value of @user.name
whereas all [ADDRESS]
’es will contains My new address
It’s as simple as that.
To use table placeholders, you should create a Table in your document and give it a name. In OpenOffice, it’s just a matter of right-clicking the table you just created, choose Table Properties… and type a name in the Name field.
If you inform :header=>true
, the first row will be treated as a header and left untouched. The remaining rows will be used as the template for the table. If you have more than one template row, they will be cycled. This is usefull for making zebra tables.
As with Field placeholders, just insert a [FIELD_NAME]
in each cell and let the magic takes place.
Taking the folowing example:
report = ODFReport::Report.new("Users/john/my_template.odt") do |r| r.add_field "USER_NAME", @user.nome r.add_field "ADDRESS", @user.address r.add_table("TABLE_1", @list_of_itens, :header=>true) do |t| t.add_column(:item_id, :id) t.add_column(:description) do { |item| "==> #{item.description}" } end end
and considering you have a table like this in your template
--------------------------------- | [ITEM_ID] | [DESCRIPTION] | --------------------------------- * this is my lame attempt to draw a table. you don't suppose to type this. you have to use an actual table. i don't know... just thought I'd mention it ;-)
and a collection @list_of_itens, it will be created one row for each item in the collection, and the replacement will take place accordingly.
Any format applied to the fields in the template will be preserved.
You must put a mock image in your odt template and give it a name. That name will be used to replace the mock image for the actual image.
You can also assign any properties you want to the mock image and they will be kept once the image is replaced.
An image replace would look like this:
report = ODFReport::Report.new("Users/john/my_template.odt") do |r| r.add_image :graphics1, "/path/to/the/image.jpg" end
Sometimes, you have to repeat a whole chunk of a document, in a structure a lot more complex than a table. Now you can make a Section in your template and use it in this situations. Creating a Session in OpenOffice is as easy as select menu Insert and then Section…, and then choose a name for it.
Section ’s are lot like Tables, in the sense that you can pass a collection and have that section repeated for each member of the collection. But, Sections can have anything inside it, even Tables and nested Sections, as long as you pass the appropriate data structure.
Let’s see an example:
@invoices = Invoice.find(:all) report = ODFReport::Report.new("reports/invoice.odt") do |r| r.add_field(:title, "INVOICES REPORT") r.add_field(:date, Date.today) r.add_section("SC_INVOICE", @invoices) do |s| s.add_field(:number) { |invoice| invoice.number.to_s.rjust(5, '0') } s.add_field(:name, :customer_name) s.add_field(:address, :customer_address) s.add_table("TB_ITEMS", :items, :header => true) do |t| t.add_column(:id) t.add_column(:product) {|item| item.product.name } t.add_column(:value, :product_value) end s.add_field(:total) do |invoice| if invoice.status == 'CLOSED' invoice.total else invoice.items.sum('product_value')} end end s.add_section("SUB_NOTES", :notes) do |s1| s1.add_field(:note_title) { |n| n.title } s1.add_table ... end end end
Note that when you add a Table to a Section, you don’t pass the collection itself, but the attribute of the item of that section that’s gonna return the collection for that particular Table. Sounds complicated, huh? But once you get it, it’s quite straightforward.
In the above example, s.add_table("TB_ITEMS", :items, :header => true) do |t|
, the :items
thing refers to a invoice.items
. Easy, right?
It’s fairly simple to generate the document. You can use this inside a Rails application or in a standalone script.
In a controller, you can have a code like this:
def print @ticket = Ticket.find(params[:id]) report = ODFReport::Report.new("#{RAILS_ROOT}/app/reports/ticket.odt") do |r| r.add_field(:id, @ticket.id.to_s) r.add_field(:created_by, @ticket.created_by) r.add_field(:created_at, @ticket.created_at.strftime("%d/%m/%Y - %H:%M")) r.add_field(:type, @ticket.type.name) r.add_field(:status, @ticket.status_text) r.add_field(:date, Time.now.strftime("%d/%m/%Y - %H:%M")) r.add_field(:solution, (@ticket.solution || '')) r.add_table("OPERATORS", @ticket.operators) do |t| t.add_column(:operator_name) { |op| "#{op.name} (#{op.department.short_name})" } end r.add_table("FIELDS", @ticket.fields) do |t| t.add_column(:field_name, :name) t.add_column(:field_value) { |field| field.text_value || "Empty" } end end report_file_name = report.generate send_file(report_file_name) end
The generate
method will, er… generate the document in a temp dir and returns the full path of the generated file, so you can send it back to the user.
That’s all I have to say about that.
It’s just the same as in a Rails app, but you can inform the path where the file will be generated instead of using a temp dir.
report = ODFReport::Report.new("ticket.odt") do |r| ... populates the report ... end report.generate("./documents/")
rubyzip: for manipulating the contents of the odt file, since it’s actually a zip file.
nokogiri: for parsing and manipulating the document xml files.
Well, this is my first attempt. This gem was extracted from an actual project we developed internally, to fulfill our specific needs.
That said, I would really appreciate any input you can come up with. Critics, suggestions, bug reports are welcome and will be thoroughly examined.