This acts_as
extension provides the capabilities for sorting and reordering a number of objects in a list. The class that has this specified needs to have a position
column defined as an integer on the mapped database table.
There are a couple of changes of behaviour from 0.8.0
onwards:
- If you specify
add_new_at: :top
, new items will be added to the top of the list like always. But now, if you specify a position at insert time:.create(position: 3)
, the position will be respected. In this example, the item will end up at position3
and will move other items further down the list. Before0.8.0
the position would be ignored and the item would still be added to the top of the list. #220 acts_as_list
now copes with disparate position integers (i.e. gaps between the numbers). There has been a change in behaviour for thehigher_items
method. It now returns items with the first item in the collection being the closest item to the reference item, and the last item in the collection being the furthest from the reference item (a.k.a. the first item in the list). #223
In your Gemfile:
gem 'acts_as_list'
Or, from the command line:
gem install acts_as_list
At first, you need to add a position
column to desired table:
rails g migration AddPositionToTodoItem position:integer
rake db:migrate
After that you can use acts_as_list
method in the model:
class TodoList < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :todo_items, -> { order(position: :asc) }
end
class TodoItem < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :todo_list
acts_as_list scope: :todo_list
end
todo_list = TodoList.find(...)
todo_list.todo_items.first.move_to_bottom
todo_list.todo_items.last.move_higher
You'll have a number of methods added to each instance of the ActiveRecord model that to which acts_as_list
is added.
In acts_as_list
, "higher" means further up the list (a lower position
), and "lower" means further down the list (a higher position
). That can be confusing, so it might make sense to add tests that validate that you're using the right method given your context.
list_item.insert_at(2)
list_item.move_lower
will do nothing if the item is the lowest itemlist_item.move_higher
will do nothing if the item is the highest itemlist_item.move_to_bottom
list_item.move_to_top
list_item.remove_from_list
list_item.increment_position
list_item.decrement_position
list_item.set_list_position(3)
list_item.first?
list_item.last?
list_item.in_list?
list_item.not_in_list?
list_item.default_position?
list_item.higher_item
list_item.higher_items
will return all the items abovelist_item
in the list (ordered by the position, ascending)list_item.lower_item
list_item.lower_items
will return all the items belowlist_item
in the list (ordered by the position, ascending)
As it stands acts_as_list
requires position values to be set on the model before the instance methods above will work. Adding something like the below to your migration will set the default position. Change the parameters to order if you want a different initial ordering.
class AddPositionToTodoItem < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_column :todo_items, :position, :integer
TodoItem.order(:updated_at).each.with_index(1) do |todo_item, index|
todo_item.update_column :position, index
end
end
end
If you are using the scope option things can get a bit more complicated. Let's say you have acts_as_list scope: :todo_list
, you might instead need something like this:
TodoList.all.each do |todo_list|
todo_list.todo_items.order(:updated_at).each.with_index(1) do |todo_item, index|
todo_item.update_column :position, index
end
end
All position
queries (select, update, etc.) inside gem methods are executed without the default scope (i.e. Model.unscoped
), this will prevent nasty issues when the default scope is different from acts_as_list
scope.
The position
column is set after validations are called, so you should not put a presence
validation on the position
column.
If you need a scope by a non-association field you should pass an array, containing field name, to a scope:
class TodoItem < ActiveRecord::Base
# `kind` is a plain text field (e.g. 'work', 'shopping', 'meeting'), not an association
acts_as_list scope: [:kind]
end
You can also add multiple scopes in this fashion:
class TodoItem < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_list scope: [:kind, :owner_id]
end
Furthermore, you can optionally include a hash of fixed parameters that will be included in all queries:
class TodoItem < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_list scope: [:kind, :owner_id, deleted_at: nil]
end
This is useful when using this gem in conjunction with the popular acts_as_paranoid gem.
column
default:position
. Use this option if the column name in your database is different from position.top_of_list
default:1
. Use this option to define the top of the list. Use 0 to make the collection act more like an array in its indexing.add_new_at
default::bottom
. Use this option to specify whether objects get added to the:top
or:bottom
of the list.nil
will result in new items not being added to the list on create, i.e, position will be kept nil after create.
If you need to temporarily disable acts_as_list
during specific operations such as mass-update or imports:
TodoItem.acts_as_list_no_update do
perform_mass_update
end
In an acts_as_list_no_update
block, all callbacks are disabled, and positions are not updated. New records will be created with
the default value from the database. It is your responsibility to correctly manage positions
values.
You can also pass an array of classes as an argument to disable database updates on just those classes. It can be any ActiveRecord class that has acts_as_list enabled.
class TodoList < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :todo_items, -> { order(position: :asc) }
acts_as_list
end
class TodoItem < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :todo_list
has_many :todo_attachments, -> { order(position: :asc) }
acts_as_list scope: :todo_list
end
class TodoAttachment < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :todo_list
acts_as_list scope: :todo_item
end
TodoItem.acts_as_list_no_update([TodoAttachment]) do
TodoItem.find(10).update(position: 2)
TodoAttachment.find(10).update(position: 1)
TodoAttachment.find(11).update(position: 2)
TodoList.find(2).update(position: 3) # For this instance the callbacks will be called because we haven't passed the class as an argument
end
Version 0.9.0
adds acts_as_list_no_update
(brendon#244) and compatibility with not-null and uniqueness constraints on the database (brendon#246). These additions shouldn't break compatibility with existing implementations.
As of version 0.7.5
Rails 5 is supported.
All versions 0.1.5
onwards require Rails 3.0.x and higher.
- Sort based feature
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet
- Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it
- Fork the project
- Start a feature/bugfix branch
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
- Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
- I would recommend using Rails 3.1.x and higher for testing the build before a pull request. The current test harness does not quite work with 3.0.x. The plugin itself works, but the issue lies with testing infrastructure.
Copyright (c) 2007 David Heinemeier Hansson, released under the MIT license