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Rails::Decorators

Using Rails engines extensively, we needed a way to customize behavior for implementations of the platform. Rails provides a great mechanism for views and assets, but doesn't offer any functionality to handle controller/model/lib overriding/customizing. The suggested mechanism in the documentation is class_eval or ActiveSupport::Concern. Our preferred method for this is module prepending, which is cleaner than class_eval in that it avoids alias method chaining and becomes part of the ancestor chain.

We also want junior developers to be able to jump in and be productive ASAP - not necessarily requiring they learn the techniques of class_eval to fix a bug or get a simple task done. Yes, we educate and promote this as the developer grows, but we want the barriers to contribution as low as possible.

We like the ActiveSupport::Concern API, so this library mimics the API of ActiveSupport::Concern and layers on top some niceties for the specific task of customizing a Rails engine. Also, we don't like having to store decorated behavior in a separate directory (like https://github.com/parndt/decorators). Storing decorations in the same place as new classes makes it much easier to see the overall picture of how the engine has been customized/extended in one shot.

Usage

Say we have a class in an engine like so:

# in ecommerce/app/models/ecommerce/product.rb
module Ecommerce
  class Product < ApplicationRecord
    def price
      skus.first.price
    end
  end
end

Rails::Decorators allows customizing this class like so:

# in Rails.root/app/models/ecommerce/product.decorator
module Ecommerce
  decorate Product do
    decorated do
      # Class methods may be called here. Evaluates after prepending module.
      attr_writer :on_sale
    end

    class_methods do
      # Methods defined here extend/decorate static methods on the
      # decorated class.
      def sorts
        super + ['discount_rate']
      end
    end

    # Methods defined here extend/decorate instance methods on the
    # decorated class.
    def price
      result = super
      result *= discount_rate if on_sale?
      result
    end
  end
end

Rails::Decorators achieves this in a manner similar to ActiveSupport::Concern - it dynamically creates a module out of the block passed, and then prepends that into the original class. The above is equivalent to (note that this would need to be required as well):

# in Rails.root/app/models/ecommerce/product_decorator.rb
module Ecommerce
  class Product
    module Decorator
      module ClassMethods
        # Methods defined here extend/decorate static methods on the
        # decorated class.
        def sorts
          super + ['discount_rate']
        end
      end

      # Methods defined here extend/decorate instance methods on the
      # decorated class.
      def price
        result = super
        result *= discount_rate if on_sale?
        result
      end
    end
  end

  Product.send(:prepend, Product::Decorator)
  Product.singleton_class.send(:prepend, Product::Decorator::ClassMethods)
  Product.class_eval do
    # Class methods may be called here. Evaluates after prepending module.
    attr_writer :on_sale
  end
end

You can also decorate more than one class at a time:

# in Rails.root/app/models/ecommerce/navigable.decorator
module Ecommerce
  decorate Product, Category, Page do
    def generate_slug
      # my custom logic here
    end
  end
end

Other engines may want to namespace their customizations so as not to collide with further customizations:

# in ecommerce_blog/app/models/ecommerce/product.decorator
module Ecommerce
  decorate Product, with: 'blog' do
    def blog_entries
      BlogEntry.for_product(id)
    end
  end
end

It is strongly suggested you update your editor of choice to use Ruby syntax highlighting on *.decorator files.

Case Study: Modifying Devise

Let's examine a more real-world case: In the Devise OmniAuth How-To Article, the maintainers instruct users to create a new controller named Users::OmniauthCallbacksController that inherits from Devise::OmniauthCallbacksController, and override the entire class in the devise_for method by supplying the name of the controller to use. This has always been a point of contention for some as it's quite difficult to understand why you need to do this if you don't have a lot of experience with Rails applications.

However, if you had rails-decorators installed, you don't need to do any of that. Just decorate the controller supplied by Devise in app/controllers/devise/omniauth_callbacks_controller.decorator!

module Devise
  decorate OmniauthCallbacksController do
    # We're using Facebook as an example here so it can be directly
    # translated from the aforementioned article...
    def facebook
      # You need to implement the method below in your model (e.g. app/models/user.rb)
      @user = User.from_omniauth(request.env["omniauth.auth"])

      if @user.persisted?
        sign_in_and_redirect @user, event: :authentication #this will throw if @user is not activated
        set_flash_message(:notice, :success, kind: "Facebook") if is_navigational_format?
      else
        session["devise.facebook_data"] = request.env["omniauth.auth"]
        redirect_to new_user_registration_url
      end
    end

    def failure
      redirect_to root_path
    end
  end
end

With rails-decorators, you get to skip about 3 or 4 paragraphs of docs and go right to the .from_omniauth definition. Decorating saves both time and mental energy so you can get back to actually writing your application.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'rails-decorators'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install rails-decorators

Contributing

Contribution directions go here.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.