Archive for the ‘XML’ Category

Making WillPaginate and Rails to_xml play nice with ActiveResource

Friday, October 10th, 2008 by Scott Davis

We are currently working on a project that involves Flex and active resource + will_paginate and we needed to be able to paginate the xml transactions easily. Unfortunately, will_paginate and to_xml don’t play nicely when it comes to adding the current_page, total_pages, and page attributes to the xml. After many failed attempts I went looking around github and found in a few forks of will paginate that some people had solved this problem but, I didn’t want to install another version of the gem to risk breaking other apps on the server so I did it the rails way!

I started by creating a module that opens up the will_paginate collection class and includes ActiveResource and alias method chain the to_xml method to include these values. Example code below.

#enviroment.rb
...
require 'to_xml_extensions'
#lib/to_xml_extensions.rb
module WillPaginateHelpers
  include ActiveSupport::CoreExtensions::Array::Conversions
  def to_xml_with_collection_type(options = {})
        serializeable_collection.to_xml_without_collection_type(options) do |xml|
          xml.tag!(:current_page, {:type => ActiveSupport::CoreExtensions::Hash::Conversions::XML_TYPE_NAMES[current_page.class.name]}, current_page)
          xml.tag!(:per_page, {:type => ActiveSupport::CoreExtensions::Hash::Conversions::XML_TYPE_NAMES[per_page.class.name]}, per_page)
          xml.tag!(:total_entries, {:type => ActiveSupport::CoreExtensions::Hash::Conversions::XML_TYPE_NAMES[total_entries.class.name]}, total_entries)
        end.sub(%{type="array"}, %{type="collection"})
      end
      alias_method_chain :to_xml, :collection_type
 
      def serializeable_collection #:nodoc:
        # Ugly hack because to_xml will not yield the XML Builder object when empty?
        empty? ? returning(self.clone) { |c| c.instance_eval {|i| def empty?; false; end } } : self
      end
end
 
WillPaginate::Collection.send(:include, WillPaginateHelpers)

This now gives me the proper xml when I call to_xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<time-cards type="collection">
  <current_page type="integer">1</current_page>
  <per_page type="integer">25</per_page>
  <total_entries type="integer">108</total_entries>
  <time_card>
    <approved type="boolean">false</approved>
    <billable type="boolean">false</billable>
    <created_at type="datetime">2008-10-10T14:04:13-04:00</created_at>
    <date type="datetime">2008-10-10T14:04:13-04:00</date>
    <has_been_billed type="boolean">false</has_been_billed>
    <has_been_paid type="boolean">true</has_been_paid>
    <hours type="float">2.0</hours>
    <id type="integer">98</id>
    <is_overtime type="boolean">false</is_overtime>
    <task_id type="integer">6</task_id>
    <updated_at type="datetime">2008-10-10T14:04:13-04:00</updated_at>
    <user_id type="integer">1</user_id>
  </time_card>
  ...
</timecards>

Using ActiveRecord’s to_xml to produce custom xml including deep level associations

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008 by Glenn Gentzke

ActiveRecord provides a powerful method to all its records called to_xml. Most web developers using RoR should be familiar with its usage and hopefully use it for their simple xml production needs. But what do you do when you need to produce xml that is selective, includes associations, or contains custom tags? There are many ways to manipulate to_xml’s output and I’ll explain a few below.
(more…)