Rails form_tag

Rails Forms

Welcome to the world of Rails forms, which give users the ability to submit data into form fields. This can be used for: creating new database records, building a contact form, integrating a search engine field, and pretty much every other aspect of the application that requires user input. When it comes to forms in Rails, you will discover that you will have the flexibility to utilize:

  • Built-in form helper methods

  • Plain HTML form elements

This lesson is going to begin by integrating HTML form elements and then slowly start refactoring the form using Rails methods. It would be very easy to integrate form helpers (and we could have our form working in a few minutes). However, fully understanding what Rails is doing behind the scenes is more important than getting the form working right away. We're going to build the system from the ground up. When we're finished, you should be able to understand all of the processes that are necessary in order to process forms in an application properly and securely.

Note: For the next few labs, we're not going to use mass assignment, we'll assign each attribute individually. For example, instead of Student.create(params[:students]) we'll write Student.create(first_name: params[:first_name], last_name: params[:last_name]) and name our fields in the view files without the "student" preface. We'll discuss why in the upcoming reading on Strong Params.

Rendering the form view

Today we'll be giving the user the ability to create a new post in our BlogFlash application. Let's first create a Capybara spec to ensure that going to posts/new takes us to our form. If you think back to the Rails URL Helpers lesson, we know that we don't need to hard-code the route into our tests any longer. Let's use the standard RESTful convention of new_post_path for the route helper name:

# specs/features/post_spec.rb

require 'rails_helper'

describe 'new post' do
  it 'ensures that the form route works with the /new action' do
    visit new_post_path
    expect(page.status_code).to eq(200)
  end
end

As expected, this results in a failure saying that we don't have a new_post_path method, so let's create that in our routes.rb file:

resources :posts, only: [:index, :new]

Now it gives this failure: The action 'new' could not be found for PostsController. To correct this, let's add a new action in PostsController:

def new
end

Lastly, it says we're missing a template. Let's create app/views/posts/new.html.erb. Now that our routing test is passing, let's add a matcher spec to ensure that the template is properly displaying HTML on the new post page:

# specs/features/post_spec.rb

require 'rails_helper'

describe 'new post' do

  ...

  it 'renders HTML in the /new template' do
    visit new_post_path
    expect(page).to have_content('Post Form')
  end
end

Running this spec gets a matcher error. We can get this passing by adding <h3>Post Form</h3> to the new.html.erb view template.

Building the form in HTML

Our first pass at the form will be in plain HTML. In this reading, we're not concerned with creating any records in the database. Our focus is on the form process. We'll simply be printing out the submitted form params on the show page.

Let's create a spec for this. It's going to take a while for this to pass since we're going to be spending some time on the HTML creation process, but it's a good practice to ensure all new features are tested before the implementation code is added.

As you are updating the code, make sure to test it out in the browser – don't just rely on the tests. It's important to see the errors in both the tests and the browser since you'll want to become familiar with both types of failure messages.

# specs/features/post_spec.rb

require 'rails_helper'

describe 'new post' do

  ...

  it "displays a new post form that redirects to the index page, which then contains the submitted post's title and description" do
    visit new_post_path
    fill_in 'post_title', with: 'My post title'
    fill_in 'post_description', with: 'My post description'

    click_on 'Submit Post'

    expect(page.current_path).to eq(posts_path)
    expect(page).to have_content('My post title')
    expect(page).to have_content('My post description')
  end
end

This fails for obvious reasons. Let's follow the TDD process, letting the failures help build our form. The first error says that Capybara can't find the form field post_title. To fix that, let's create an HTML form in the new.html.erb view template:

<form>
  <label>Post title:</label><br>
  <input type="text" id="post_title" name="post[title]"><br>

  <label>Post description:</label><br>
  <textarea id="post_description" name="post[description]"></textarea><br>

  <input type="submit" value="Submit Post">
</form>

<%= params.inspect %>

The name attributes in each input should look pretty familiar by now –– they're good ole' nested hashes. Just like Sinatra, Rails takes the user input entered into form fields and stores it in the params hash. The name attribute for a given input field is used as the key within params at which the entered data is stored. For instance, the input entered into the "Post title:" field in the above form would be stored as the value of params[:post][:title]. Traditionally, Rails apps use that model[attribute] syntax for name attributes (e.g., post[title]). We'll talk more about that in a later lesson.

You'll also notice that we're printing out params to the page. Until we set up the form action, clicking Submit Post won't actually redirect to a page on which the input values will be visible, but we'd still like to verify that the params hash is being populated correctly.

If we run the tests again, we'll see that Capybara expected submitting the form to redirect it to /posts, but instead it found itself back on /posts/new. Capybara was able to fill in the form elements and click Submit Post, but we need to update the form tag with an action attribute:

<form action="<%= posts_path %>">

Now the form redirects to /posts. However, we also need to add a method attribute so that the application knows that we are submitting form data via the POST HTTP verb:

<form action="<%= posts_path %>" method="POST">

If you open up the browser and submit the form, you will get the following routing error: No route matches [POST] "/posts". We need to draw a create route so that the routing system knows what to do when a POST request is sent to the /posts resource:

# config/routes.rb

resources :posts, only: [:index, :new, :create]

If you run rake routes, you'll see we now have a posts#create action:

  Prefix Verb URI Pattern          Controller#Action
   posts GET  /posts(.:format)     posts#index
         POST /posts(.:format)     posts#create
new_post GET  /posts/new(.:format) posts#new

Running the spec tests again leads to an 'unknown action' error: The action 'create' could not be found for PostsController. Let's add a create action in PostsController and have it create a new Post object with the values from params and then redirect to the index page:

def create
  Post.create(title: params[:post][:title], description: params[:post][:description])
  redirect_to posts_path
end

If you run the Rails server, navigate to the posts/new page, fill in the title and description form elements, and click submit, you will find a new type of error:

InvalidAuthenticityToken

Which leads us to a very important part of Rails forms: CSRF.

What is CSRF?

"CSRF" stands for: Cross-Site Request Forgery. Instead of giving a boring explanation of what happens during a CSRF request, let's walk through a real-life example of a Cross-Site Request Forgery hack:

  1. You go to your bank website and log in. After checking your balance, you open up a new tab in the browser and go to your favorite meme site.

  2. Unbeknownst to you, the meme site is actually a hacking site that has scripts running in the background as soon as you land on their page.

  3. One of the scripts on the site hijacks the banking session that's open in the other browser tab and submits a form request to transfer money to their account.

  4. The banking form can't tell that the form request wasn't made by you, so it goes through the process as if you were the one who made the request.

One site making a request to another site via a form is the general flow of a Cross-Site Request Forgery. Rails blocks this from happening by default by requiring that a unique authenticity token be submitted with each form. This authenticity token is stored in the session and can't be hijacked by hackers: it performs a match check when the form is submitted, and it will throw an error if the token isn't there or doesn't match.

To fix this ActionController::InvalidAuthenticityToken error, we can integrate the form_authenticity_token helper into the form as a hidden field:

<form action="<%= posts_path %>" method="POST">
  <label>Post title:</label><br>
  <input type="text" id="post_title" name="post[title]"><br>

  <label>Post description:</label><br>
  <textarea id="post_description" name="post[description]"></textarea><br>

  <input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="<%= form_authenticity_token %>">
  <input type="submit" value="Submit Post">
</form>

If we refresh the posts/new page, fill out the form, and click Submit Post, the browser should load the index view with our newly-created post's title and description in a bulleted list. All of the spec tests should now be passing, and our form is functional. However, this is probably one of the ugliest and least-elegant Rails forms that has ever existed, so let's do some refactoring.

Using form helpers

ActionView, a sub-gem of Rails, provides a number of helper methods to assist with streamlining view template code. Specifically, we can use ActionView methods to improve our form! Let's start by integrating a Rails form_tag element:

<%= form_tag posts_path do %>
  <label>Post title:</label><br>
  <input type="text" id="post_title" name="post[title]"><br>

  <label>Post description:</label><br>
  <textarea id="post_description" name="post[description]"></textarea><br>

  <input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="<%= form_authenticity_token %>">
  <input type="submit" value="Submit Post">
<% end %>

Next, we'll replace that hidden authenticity token input field with a Rails hidden_field_tag:

<%= form_tag posts_path do %>

  ...

  <%= hidden_field_tag :authenticity_token, form_authenticity_token %>
  <input type="submit" value="Submit Post">
<% end %>

If we run the tests again, we'll see that they're all still passing. Let's take a look at the HTML generated by our Rails ActionView methods:

<form action="/posts" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post"><input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="&#x2713;" /><input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="zkOjrjTG8Lxn0CF8Lt/kFIgWdYyY3NTMbwh+Q9kPX1NrYztgq0GZNCjLFavBXka1Y5QhNjDlhX+dzQoZMzUjOA==" />
  <label>Post title:</label><br>
  <input type="text" id="post_title" name="post[title]"><br>

  <label>Post description:</label><br>
  <textarea id="post_description" name="post[description]"></textarea><br>

  <input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" id="authenticity_token" value="7SuubeJGbqfm4rO+F5VTS6Wl1SNCTGOr/mrYZKOQLbtICzajfcEHL6n5h2n4FPHqTieBmep1MhgMr6w+SapR0A==" />
  <input type="submit" value="Submit Post">
</form>

The form_tag Rails helper is smart enough to know that we want to submit the form via the POST method, and it automatically renders the HTML that we were writing by hand before. The form_tag method also automatically generates the necessary authenticity token, so we can remove the now-redundant hidden_field_tag.

Next, let's integrate some other form helpers to let Rails generate the input elements for us. For this form, we'll be using a text_field_tag and a text_area_tag and passing each the corresponding name attribute as a symbol. It's important to keep in mind that form helpers aren't magic –– they're simply Ruby methods that accept arguments, such as the name attribute and any additional parameters related to the form's elements. In addition to updating the form fields, we'll also replace the HTML tag for the submit button with a submit_tag.

<%= form_tag posts_path do %>
  <label>Post title:</label><br>
  <%= text_field_tag :'post[title]' %><br>

  <label>Post description:</label><br>
  <%= text_area_tag :'post[description]' %><br>

  <%= submit_tag "Submit Post" %>
<% end %>

Let's check out the raw HTML all these helper methods generate for us:

<form action="/posts" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post"><input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="&#x2713;" /><input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="vq9SMVNk0CjwgZmYomFRhwbo5dfu7tI/2FiR7jOtlVgbj8r/zOO5oL+arU9N4PMm7WqxbUbXg4wqneW02ZfpMw==" />
  <label>Post title:</label><br>
  <input type="text" name="post[title]" id="post_title" /><br>

  <label>Post description:</label><br>
  <textarea name="post[description]" id="post_description">
</textarea><br>

  <input type="submit" name="commit" value="Submit Post" />
</form>

Run the spec tests one last time to verify that everything is still passing. You now know how to build a Rails form from scratch and refactor it using Rails form helper methods. Nice work!

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