By default, the index page is a table with each of the models content columns and links to show, edit and delete the object. There are many ways to customize what gets displayed.
To display an attribute or a method on a resource, simply pass a symbol into the column method:
index do
column :title
end
For association columns we make an educated guess on what to display by calling the following methods in the following order:
:display_name, :full_name, :name, :username, :login, :title, :email, :to_s
This can be customized in config/initializers/active_admin.rb.
If the default title does not work for you, pass it as the first argument:
index do
column "My Custom Title", :title
end
Sometimes calling methods just isn't enough and you need to write some view specific code. For example, say we wanted a colum called Title which holds a link to the posts admin screen.
The column method accepts a block as an argument which will then be rendered within the context of the view for each of the objects in the collection.
index do
column "Title" do |post|
link_to post.title, admin_post_path(post)
end
end
The block gets called once for each resource in the collection. The resource gets passed into the block as an argument.
To setup links to View, Edit and Delete a resource, use the default_actions method:
index do
column :title
default_actions
end
Alternatively, you can create a column with custom links:
index do
column :title
column "Actions" do |post|
link_to "View", admin_post_path(post)
end
end
When a column is generated from an Active Record attribute, the table is sortable by default. If you are creating a custom column, you may need to give Active Admin a hint for how to sort the table.
If a column is defined using a block, you must pass the key to turn on sorting. The key is the attribute which gets used to sort objects using Active Record.
index do
column "Title", :sortable => :title do |post|
link_to post.title, admin_post_path(post)
end
end
You can turn off sorting on any column by passing false:
index do
column :title, :sortable => false
end
The entire index block is rendered within the context of the view, so you can easily do things that show or hide columns based on the current context.
For example, if you were using CanCan:
index do
column :title, :sortable => false
if can? :manage, Post
column :some_secret_data
end
end