A simple gem to implement active states on links using the standard Rails link_to
helper.
This can be helpful in navigation lists or buttons to give them a class when the current URL matches a condition on the link helper.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'link_to_active_state'
Or install from the repository:
gem 'link_to_active_state', git: 'git://github.com/robotmay/link_to_active_state.git', tag: 'v1.0.5'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install link_to_active_state
This gem adds a small bit of extra functionality to the default Rails link_to
view helper. It provides a very simple way of adding classes to links based on the current path.
Test the path using a string/path helper:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: account_path
Which, if the request.fullpath
matches account_path
, will result in:
<a href="/account" class="active">Account</a>
Using a regular expression:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: /\/account/i
Or a proc:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: lambda { request.fullpath == account_path }
Any other value will cause it to be matched against the URL supplied to the link_to helper:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: true
By default the class "active" will be added to the existing classes of the link. However you can specify your own:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: /\/account/i, active_state: "highlighted"
<a href="/account" class="highlighted">Account</a>
You can also customise other options by using a proc:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: /\/account/i, active_state: lambda { |html_options|
html_options.merge({ "data-active" => "true" })
}
<a href="/account" data-active="true">Account</a>
If you need an active class on an li tag, for use in a Bootstrap nav for example:
link_to "Account", account_path, active_on: account_path, active_wrapper: :li
Which will result in:
<li class="active">
<a href="/account" class="active">Account</a>
</li>
Note the li tag is included as part of the html generated by the link_to helper and should not be added separately.
You can also pass a proc to the wrapper option. This takes two arguments; the generated link and the options for the wrapper (which will include the active state class):
link_to "Account", account_path,
active_on: account_path,
active_wrapper: proc { |link, wrapper_opts|
content_tag(:li, link, wrapper_opts)
}
And for either of the above methods you can supply HTML attributes for the wrapper:
link_to "Account", account_path,
active_on: account_path,
active_wrapper: :li,
active_wrapper_options: { rel: "gallery" }
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request