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Tips and tricks
Say you want to return a few things, for example a proper data item, and also a status code and message. You don't want to create an object just to hold these items for the output view, but instead just use them all directly in the output view. To do this, make the objects instance variables, like usual, eg:
@foo = "bar"
@pop = 123
Then use the "object false" facility in the RABL template, like so:
object false
node(:foo) { @foo }
node(:pop) { @pop }
If @foo is a more complex object, you can just specify which of its attributes to use by using a child() call instead, like this:
model:
class Car
attr_accessor :car_make, :car_name
end
controller:
@cars = Car.all
@status = "ok"
view:
object false
child(@cars) { attributes :car_name, :car_make }
node(:status) { @status }
output (assuming json roots are turned off):
{ status:"ok", [{ car_make:"Toyota", car_name:"Prius"},...]}
Child and Node traverses the objects differently. Child doesn't use a block to pass in the current object as it navigates through the object and alters the idea of 'self' whereas Node passes in the current object and does not change 'self'.
object @foo # root_object is @foo
child :target do # root_object is now @foo.target
attribute :bar # comes from @foo.target.bar
end
node :hello do |hi| # root_object is still @foo
hi.bar # comes from @foo.bar
end
- pulled from Issue #273
- extended example with output