# Responders
A set of responders modules to dry up your Rails 3 app. If you are interested in the version
to be used with Rails 2.3 together with Inherited Resources, please check this branch instead:
http://github.com/plataformatec/responders/tree/v0.4
## Responders Types
### FlashResponder
Sets the flash based on the controller action and resource status.
For instance, if you do: `respond_with(@post)` on a POST request and the resource `@post`
does not contain errors, it will automatically set the flash message to
`"Post was successfully created"` as long as you configure your I18n file:
```yaml
flash:
actions:
create:
notice: "%{resource_name} was successfully created."
update:
notice: "%{resource_name} was successfully updated."
destroy:
notice: "%{resource_name} was successfully destroyed."
alert: "%{resource_name} could not be destroyed."
```
In case the resource contains errors, you should use the failure key on I18n. This is
useful to dry up flash messages from your controllers. If you need a specific message
for a controller, let's say, for `PostsController`, you can also do:
```yaml
flash:
posts:
create:
notice: "Your post was created and will be published soon"
```
This responder is activated in all non get requests. By default it will use the keys
`:notice` and `:alert`, but they can be changed in your application:
```ruby
config.responders.flash_keys = [ :success, :failure ]
```
You can also have embedded HTML. Just create a `_html` scope.
```yaml
flash:
actions:
create:
alert_html: "OH NOES! You did it wrong!"
posts:
create:
notice_html: "Yay! You did it!"
```
### HttpCacheResponder
Automatically adds Last-Modified headers to API requests. This
allows clients to easily query the server if a resource changed and if the client tries
to retrieve a resource that has not been modified, it returns not_modified status.
### CollectionResponder
Makes your create and update action redirect to the collection on success.
## Configuring your own responder
The first step is instal responders gem and configure it in your application:
```console
gem install responders
```
In your Gemfile, add this line:
```ruby
gem 'responders'
```
Responders only provides a set of modules, to use them, you have to create your own
responder. This can be done inside the lib folder for example:
```ruby
# lib/app_responder.rb
class AppResponder < ActionController::Responder
include Responders::FlashResponder
include Responders::HttpCacheResponder
end
```
And then you need to configure your application to use it:
```ruby
# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
require "app_responder"
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
self.responder = AppResponder
respond_to :html
end
```
Or, for your convenience, just do:
```console
rails generate responders:install
```
## Controller method
This gem also includes the controller method `responders`, which allows you to cherry-pick which
responders you want included in your controller.
```ruby
class InvitationsController < ApplicationController
responders :flash, :http_cache
end
```
## Generator
This gem also includes a responders controller generator, so your scaffold can be customized
to use `respond_with` instead of default `respond_to` blocks. Installing this gem automatically
sets the generator.
## Examples
Want more examples ? Check out this blog posts:
* [One in Three: Inherited Resources, Has Scope and Responders](http://blog.plataformatec.com.br/2009/12/one-in-three-inherited-resources-has-scope-and-responders/)
* [Embracing REST with mind, body and soul](http://blog.plataformatec.com.br/2009/08/embracing-rest-with-mind-body-and-soul/)
* [Three reasons to love ActionController::Responder](http://weblog.rubyonrails.org/2009/8/31/three-reasons-love-responder/)
* [My five favorite things about Rails 3](http://www.engineyard.com/blog/2009/my-five-favorite-things-about-rails-3/)
## Bugs and Feedback
If you discover any bugs or want to drop a line, feel free to create an issue on GitHub.
http://github.com/plataformatec/responders/issues
MIT License. Copyright 2012 Plataforma Tecnologia. http://blog.plataformatec.com.br