Let's say I have the simple rails blog app.
And I have a custom action, like page_views
which shows the number of views of the post.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def page_views
#show some page views
end
end
And there is also an associated view in the app/views/Posts
folder.
Now, in the routes.rb
I have:
map.resources :posts
map.resources :posts, :collection => {
:page_views=> :get
}
in my posts show.html.erb
file I have a link to the page_views
view:
link_to("View Page Views",page_views_posts_path + "/" + post.id.to_s)
Another paths
:
page_views_posts_path(post)
page_views_path(post)
page_views_posts(post)
Have either resulted in method not found or an incorrect url, like:
http://localhost:3000/posts/page_views.#<posts:0xabcdef00>
I would assume the url should be:
http://localhost:3000/posts/page_views/1
So, what I am missing here?
If you want to provide page_views
page for each view you should declare extra action not as collection method but as a member method:
map.resources :posts, :member => { :page_views=> :get }
Also if you want this for all posts as well (show the ranking table of some sorts) add the same parameter as collection action:
map.resources :posts, :member => { :page_views=> :get }, :collection => { :page_views => :get }
This way you'll have following routes generated:
page_views_post_path(post) # for single post
page_views_posts_path # for all posts
You can check new routes by running following command:
$ rake routes | grep page_views
You will get only those associated views considering the fact that you haven't declared them for other controllers.