Customization » History » Revision 8
Revision 7 (Phil Hodgson, 05/22/2014 12:35 PM) → Revision 8/15 (Phil Hodgson, 05/22/2014 01:16 PM)
h1. Customization
h2. Enabling and Disabling "Sections" of Tapestry
Tapestry has been divided into a handful of logical "sections". To date, they are:
* Section::SIGNUP
* Section::PUBLIC_DATA
* Section::PUBLIC_PROFILE
* Section::ENROLL
* Section::GOOGLE_SURVEYS
* Section::SAMPLES
In your @config.yml@ file you can specify an array of these and assign it to the @enabled_sections@ config parameter. An example is in the @config.defaults.yml@, where only @Section::SIGNUP@ is enabled by default.
Furthermore, in your overridden views, partials, etc. (see section below) you can use embedded Ruby to access which sections are enabled with the @include_section?@ helper method. Search in the source code for examples.
h2. Overriding Default Views, Partials, Templates, etc.
It is possible to override any Rails view in the application by mimicking the directory structure in @app/views@ but under another folder @site_specific/app/views@. For example, to use your own version of @_dashboard.html.erb@ in @app/views/pages@ you would put it in @site_specific/app/views/pages@.
You can override the @#{Rails.root}/site_specific@ folder itself with the environment variable @TAPESTRY_OVERRIDE_PATH@, so that the folder can be left entirely outside of the Tapestry code base.
It is important to understand that including this folder, any subfolders, and all files is _optional_. If you do not wish to override a particular view, leave it out of the override folder.
h3. Caveat
_This statement to be followed up after more investigation._
It is my impression that when using multiple paths that the technique of using @explicitly_unloadable_constants@ for having files reload without restarting the server will not work properly. This could mean that while developing these site-specific files that the server has to be restarted after each change.
h3. Overriding @lib@ Files
The same logic works for files in the override path under the @lib@ subfolder, i.e. either @#{Rails.root}/site_specific/lib@ or @#{ENV['TAPESTRY_OVERRIDE_PATH']}/lib@.
h2. Adding Custom Questions to the "Participation Consent" Form
Currently this text and form are found in @views/participation_consents/show.html.erb@. This currently saves the user's responses in the InformedConsentResponse model. There is in this model a field called "other_answers" that is a serialized Hash where any number of "dynamically defined" answers can be saved with keys of your choosing. To accomplish this you have to add form inputs that end up with a @name@ attribute that looks like (e.g. to record "age"): @other_answers[age]@ and it will be recorded in the "other_answers" Hash in the model under the :age key.
There is a view helper for creating radio boxes for the participation concept form using this "other_answers" field. Example:
<pre>
<div class="consent-form-question">
<p>
Would you judge yourself to be sane?
<%= radio_answers( 'sanity', [['0', 'No'],
['1', 'Sometimes'],
['2', 'Yes']] ) %>
</p>
</div>
</pre>
There are also helpers for text areas (@text_area_answer@) and standard input texts (@text_field_answer@). For example:
<pre>
<div class="consent-form-question">
<p>
If sane only sometimes, please explain when and for what reason this occurs:
</p>
<p>
<%= text_area_answer 'reason_sometimes_sane', { :cols => 60, :rows => 3 } %>
</p>
</div>
</pre>
h3. Adding Custom Validation of Your Custom Question
This is done by adding a site-specific validations file in the @lib@ "override" folder, in the @lib/site_specific/validations.rb@ module. First place the following code in the file:
<pre>
module SiteSpecific
module Validations
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
# *Do not remove this +included+ block!* It is what works the magic.
included do
method_name = "#{self.name.to_s.underscore}_validations"
validate method_name if method_defined? method_name
end
end
end
</pre>
Then after this insert a method called @informed_consent_response_validations@ (after the name of the model relevant to the Participation Consent form). You can check @other_answers@ and add errors in the standard ActiveRecord way. For example:
<pre>
def informed_consent_response_validations
case self.other_answers[:sanity]
when '2'
errors.add( :other_answers, :sanity_not_permitted)
when '1'
if self.other_answers[:reason_sometimes_sane].blank?
errors.add( :other_answers, :explain_occasional_sanity )
end
end
end
</pre>
The messages should be placed in your locale file under:
<pre>
en:
activerecord:
errors:
models:
informed_consent_response:
attributes:
other_answers:
sanity_not_permitted:
You are not permitted to be sane.
explain_occasional_sanity:
Please explain when and why you are sometimes sane.
</pre>
See the documentation on [[Internationalization]] for where to put this.
h2. Overriding the Validations on Any Model
The above section explaining how to override validations for the @InformedConsentResponse@ model can serve as an example for the general case. There is only one change required to the Tapestry source code base. In general, this is discouraged, so you should consider contacting the Tapestry development team and letting them know that you've found a need to override validation on a particular model, but the change is slight and easy to deal with in future merges. Basically, you must insert, _after any model validations_, the following line:
<pre>
include SiteSpecific::Validations rescue {}
</pre>
If you do not insert this line after any of the model validations already present in the model class, you will not be able to override them. An example is already in the model for ShippingAddress (@app/models/shipping_address.rb@), where a site may want to allow specifying "State" to be optional:
<pre>
validates_presence_of :user_id
validates_presence_of :address_line_1
validates_presence_of :city
validates_presence_of :state
validates_presence_of :zip
validates_presence_of :phone
include SiteSpecific::Validations rescue {}
</pre>
Note that the @include@ is _after_ the list of @validates_presence_of@ directives. This allows any of those validations to be effectively reversed. So, in your site-specific override folder, in your @lib/site_specific/validations.rb@ file (also see example above for Consent Questions), you would simply add the following method:
<pre>
def shipping_address_validations
# allow invalid "state" field
errors.delete(:state)
end
</pre>
To remove the State field from the user interface entirely you'l also want to remove it from the relevant view, which for ShippingAddress is the partial in your site-override folder under @app/views/shipping_addresses/_form.html.erb@. Simply copy the @_form.html.erb@ file from the original source code tree and then *remove* the following lines:
<pre>
<div class="field">
<span style="color: red"> * </span><%= f.label :state %><br />
<%= f.state_select(:state, 'US', {:include_blank => "Select a State", :selected => @shipping_address.state }, { :style => "width: 230px;"}) -%>
</div>
</pre>
Or remove the @<span style="color: red"> * </span>@ to show it as non-mandatory. (For information on the @state_select@ method, see the documentation for the @carmen@ gem.)
h4. Automatic Reloading of the Validations Override During Development
As shown in the @development.rb.example@ file, you can add the following line to your @development.rb@ to have validation override changes automatically reload without having to restart your Rails server:
<pre>
ActiveSupport::Dependencies.explicitly_unloadable_constants << 'SiteSpecific::Validations'
</pre>