views:

8076

answers:

4

Similar to this question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/621340/checkboxes-on-rails

What's the correct way of making radio buttons that are related to a certain question in Ruby on Rails? At the moment I have:

<div class="form_row">
    <label for="theme">Theme:</label>
    <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', 'plain', true %> Plain
    <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', 'desert' %> Desert
    <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', 'green' %> Green
    <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', 'corporate' %> Corporate
    <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', 'funky' %> Funky
</div>

I also want to be able to automatically check the previously selected items (if this form was re-loaded). How would I load the params into the default value of these?

A: 

Hmm, from the docs I don't see how you can set the ID on the radio buttons... the label's for attribute tries to link to the ID on the radio.

rails docs for radio_button_tag

That said, from the doc, that first param is the "name"... which if that is what it is creating, should group them alltogether. If not, maybe its a bug?

Hmm, wonder if these have been fixed: http://dev.rubyonrails.org/ticket/2879 http://dev.rubyonrails.org/ticket/3353

scunliffe
+5  A: 

As in this previous post, with a slight twist:

<div class="form_row">
    <label for="theme">Theme:</label>
    <% [ 'plain', 'desert', 'green', 'corporate', 'funky' ].each do |theme| %>
      <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', theme, @theme == theme %>
      <%= theme.humanize %>
    <% end %>
</div>

Where

@theme = params[:theme]

Cheers, V.

vladr
+5  A: 

Same as V's, but has associated labels with each radio button. Clicking the label checks the radio button.

<div class="form_row">
  <p>Theme:</p>
  <% [ 'plain', 'desert', 'green', 'corporate', 'funky' ].each do |theme| %>
    <br><%= radio_button_tag 'theme', theme, @theme == theme %>
    <%= label_tag "theme_#{theme}", theme.humanize %>
  <% end %>
</div>
dazonic
+1  A: 

I would suggest having a look at formtastic

It makes radio button and check box collections vastly easier and more concise. Your code would look like so:

    <% semantic_form_for @widget, :html => {:class => 'my_style'} do |f| %>
<%= f.input :theme, :as => :radio, :label => "Theme:", 
:collection =>  [ 'plain', 'desert', 'green', 'corporate', 'funky' ] %>
<% end %>

Formtastic is largely unobtrusive and can be mixed and matched with the "classic" form builders. You can also override the formtastic css class for the form as I did above with
:html => {:class => 'my_style'}

Have a look at the pertinent Railscasts.

dirkb