All experts out there, I went thru the archives and aparantly lot more people have the same problem as me. I would like someone to answer the following question. Question: How to handle multiple rows in a single form? Example: Say there is a employee class, with the following 4 attributes 1. name (text field) 2. sex (radio button) 3. state (drop-down) 4. company policy indicator (check box) I would like to have a form with multiple rows of the employee class. Can someone please walk-thru what should happen on the controller and as well the html. Most of us are comfortable in reading and writing to the database tables, but confused on the form presentation and handling the request data on the controller side. Thanks for you help. -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
... listening ... On Sat, 2006-06-03 at 16:49 +0200, thila thila wrote:> All experts out there, > I went thru the archives and aparantly lot more people have the same > problem as me. I would like someone to answer the following question. > > Question: How to handle multiple rows in a single form? > > Example: Say there is a employee class, with the following 4 attributes > 1. name (text field) > 2. sex (radio button) > 3. state (drop-down) > 4. company policy indicator (check box) > > I would like to have a form with multiple rows of the employee class. > Can someone please walk-thru what should happen on the controller and as > well the html. Most of us are comfortable in reading and writing to the > database tables, but confused on the form presentation and handling the > request data on the controller side. > > Thanks for you help. > > >
the easiest way to understand how forms work is to start with scaffolding... have you created scaffolding for your employee class and controller? -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
The edit form generated by the scaffolding presumes one-screen = one- row. Composite input forms such as desktop app designers are used to are not expressed in the scaffolding. The issue is how to best take that scaffolding code and extend it to support editing a set of rows (employees in thilla''s case, quiz responses in my case) so one-screen = arbitrary-n-rows. There is enough there that an experienced HTML programmer could probably figure out how to adapt the code. But those of us coming from Delphi, Swing, Qt, kde, or other desktop GUI environments walk into a gaping hole in the published documentation. I can see the outline of the shape of the solution, but I''m missing the meat of the pattern (to mix metaphors really badly). This part of the learning curve is either presumed to be something that is already common knowledge, or is not the "rails way to do things". If I''m not mistaken, the trick will be to name the input elements in the cells of the HTML table in such a manner that Rails will populate the @params hash from the data submitted. Can we get more specific than this generic statement? On Sat, 2006-06-03 at 23:22 +0200, Nate Constant wrote:> the easiest way to understand how forms work is to start with > scaffolding... have you created scaffolding for your employee class and > controller? >
I think that the answer you are looking for has been answered on another thread that I started yesterday. Check out David Felstead''s response to Subject: Re: [Rails] How to get dynamically created inputs from html form back to rails app Date: Sat, 3 Jun 2006 14:49:55 +1000 (Fri, 23:49 CDT) I think that his response should give you sufficient information to get you started. If I understand his example correctly, name your elements name[], sex[], state[], and policy[]. They will then be returned to the rails app as ordered hashes of their respective data. Your save method in the controller will traverse the hashes and apply the information to the properties of the child ActiveRecord. On Sat, 2006-06-03 at 16:49 +0200, thila thila wrote:> All experts out there, > I went thru the archives and aparantly lot more people have the same > problem as me. I would like someone to answer the following question. > > Question: How to handle multiple rows in a single form? > > Example: Say there is a employee class, with the following 4 attributes > 1. name (text field) > 2. sex (radio button) > 3. state (drop-down) > 4. company policy indicator (check box) > > I would like to have a form with multiple rows of the employee class. > Can someone please walk-thru what should happen on the controller and as > well the html. Most of us are comfortable in reading and writing to the > database tables, but confused on the form presentation and handling the > request data on the controller side. > > Thanks for you help. > > >