Rails bindings for Opal. (Changelog)
If you want to integrate Opal via Webpack please refer to opal-webpack-loader installation instructions.
ℹ️ Webpack and ES6 modules are not yet officially supported, but we're working on it thanks to the awesome work done in opal-webpack-loader.
In your Gemfile
gem 'opal-rails'
or when you build your new Rails app:
rails new <app-name> --javascript=opal
Add your configuration in config/initializers/assets.rb
with the following contents:
# Compiler options
Rails.application.config.opal.method_missing = true
Rails.application.config.opal.optimized_operators = true
Rails.application.config.opal.arity_check = !Rails.env.production?
Rails.application.config.opal.const_missing = true
Rails.application.config.opal.dynamic_require_severity = :ignore
# Other options
# Send local and instance variables down to the view after converting
# thier value with `.to_json`
Rails.application.config.opal.assigns_in_templates = true
Rails.application.config.opal.assigns_in_templates = :locals # only locals
Rails.application.config.opal.assigns_in_templates = :ivars # only instance variables
For a full list of the available configuration options for the compiler please refer to: lib/opal/config.rb.
- Rename
app/assets/javascripts/application.js
toapp/assets/javascripts/application.js.rb
- Replace the Sprockets directives with plain requires
# Require the opal runtime and core library
require 'opal'
# For Rails 5.1 and above, otherwise use 'opal_ujs'
require 'rails_ujs'
# Require of JS libraries will be forwarded to sprockets as is
require 'turbolinks'
# a Ruby equivalent of the require_tree Sprockets directive is available
require_tree '.'
puts "hello world!"
require 'opal'
require 'opal_ujs'
require 'turbolinks'
require_tree '.' # a Ruby equivalent of the require_tree Sprockets directive is available
# ---- YOUR FANCY RUBY CODE HERE ----
#
# Examples:
# == Print something in the browser's console
puts "Hello world!"
pp hello: :world
require 'console'
$console.log %w[Hello world!]
# == Use Native to wrap native JS objects, $$ is preconfigured to wrap `window`
require 'native'
$$.alert "Hello world!"
# == Do some DOM manipulation with jQuery
require 'opal-jquery'
Document.ready? do
Element.find('body').html = '<h1>Hello world!</h1>'
end
# == Or access the DOM api directly
$$[:document].addEventListener(:DOMContentLoaded, -> {
$$[:document].querySelector('body')[:innerHTML] = '<h1>Hello world!</h1>'
})
If you want to use application.js
(instead of application.js.rb
) and keep using Sprockets directives, you'll need to load the Opal files you require via Sprockets manually, e.g.:
//= require opal
//= require rails_ujs
//= require turbolinks
//= require_tree .
//= require app
Opal.require('opal');
Opal.require('app');
You can use it for your views too:
# app/controllers/posts_controller.rb
def create
@post = Post.create!(params[:post])
render type: :js, locals: {comments_html: render_to_string(@post.comments)}
end
Assigned instance that would normally be available in your views are converted to JSON objects first.
# app/views/posts/create.js.opal
post = Element.find('.post')
post.find('.title').html = @post[:title]
post.find('.body').html = @post[:body]
post.find('.comments').html = comments_html
By default opal-rails
will forward any instance and local variable you'll pass to the template.
This behavior can be disabled by setting Rails.application.config.opal.assigns_in_templates
to false
in config/initializers/assets.rb
:
Rails.application.config.opal.assigns_in_templates = false
Of course you need to require haml-rails
separately since its presence is not assumed
-# app/views/posts/show.html.haml
%article.post
%h1.title= post.title
.body= post.body
%a#show-comments Display Comments!
.comments(style="display:none;")
- post.comments.each do |comment|
.comment= comment.body
:opal
Document.ready? do
Element.find('#show-comments').on :click do |click|
click.prevent_default
click.current_target.hide
Element.find('.comments').effect(:fade_in)
end
end
Extracted to (unreleased) opal-rspec-rails
Add this line to your Gemfile
:
gem 'opal-rspec-rails', github: 'opal/opal-rspec-rails'
Upcoming as opal-minitest-rails
As long as the templates are inside the Sprockets/Opal load path, then you should be able to just require them.
Let's say we have this template app/views/shared/test.haml
:
.row
.col-sm-12
= @bar
We need to make sure Opal can see and compile that template. So we need to add the path to sprockets:
# config/initializers/opal.rb
Rails.application.config.assets.paths << Rails.root.join('app', 'views', 'shared').to_s
Now, somewhere in application.rb
you need to require that template, and you can just run it through Template
:
# app/assets/javascripts/application.rb
require 'opal'
require 'opal-haml'
require 'test'
@bar = "hello world"
template = Template['test']
template.render(self)
# => '<div class="row"><div class="col-sm-12">hello world</div></div>'
Just use Opal.use_gem
in your asset initializer (config/initializers/assets.rb
).
Example:
Opal.use_gem 'cannonbol'
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