This project adheres to Semantic Versioning.
Ever wondered if there was an easier and DRY-way to set your page titles (and/or headings), introducing page title helper, a small view helper for Rails to inflect titles from controllers and actions.
In your layout, add this to your <head>-section:
<title><%= page_title %></title>That's it. Now just add translations, in e.g. config/locales/en.yml:
en:
contacts:
index:
title: "Contacts"When /contacts/ is requested, the key :en, :contacts, :index, :title
is looked up and printed, together with the applications basename, like:
Contacts - My cool App.
The format etc. is of course configurable, just head down to the options.
Put this in your Gemfile :
git_source(:github){ |repo_name| "https://github.com/#{repo_name}.git" }
gem 'page_title_helper', github: 'jbox-web/page_title_helper'then run bundle install.
All translated titles are inflected from the current controller and action, so to easily explain all lookups, here an example with the corresponding lookups:
Admin::AccountController#index => :'admin.account.index.title'
:'admin.account.title'
options[:default]
For create and update a further fallback to new.title and edit.title
have been added, because they certainly are duplicates.
Need a custom title, or need to fill in some placeholders? Just use the bang
method (page_title!), in e.g. contacts/show.html.erb the requirement is to
display the contacts name in the <title>-tagas well as in the heading?
<h1><%= page_title!(@contact.name) %></h1>A call to page_title will now return the contacts name, neat :) if for
example the <h1> does not match the <title>, then well, just do something
like:
<% page_title!(@contact.name + " (" + @contact.company.name + ")") %>
<h1><%= @contact.name %></h1>Guess, that's it. Of course it's also possible to use translate within
page_title!, to translate custom titles, like:
In config/locales/en.yml:
en:
dashboard:
index:
title: "Welcome back, {{name}}"In app/views/dashboard/index.html.erb:
<h1><%= page_title!(t('.title', name: @user.first_name)) %></h1>The :format option is used to specify how a title is formatted, i.e. if the
app name is prepended or appended or if it contains the account name etc.
It uses a similar approach as paperclip's path interpolations:
page_title format: ':title / :app' # => "Contacts / My cool app"Adding custom interpolations is as easy as defining a block, for example to access the current controller:
PageTitleHelper.interpolates :controller do |env|
env[:view].controller.controller_name.humanize
end
page_title format: ':title / :controller / :app' # => "Welcome back / Dashboard / My cool app"To access just the title, without any magic app stuff interpolated or appended, use:
page_title! "untitled"
page_title format: false # => "untitled"Need a custom format for a single title? Just return an array:
In the view:
<h1><%= page_title!(@contact.name, ":title from :company - :app") %></h1> # => <h1>Franz Meyer</h1>In the <head>:
<title><%= page_title %></title> # => this time it will use custom title like "Franz Meyer from ABC Corp. - My cool app"To streamline that feature a bit and simplify reuse of often used formats, it's possible to define format aliases like:
In an initializer, e.g., config/initializers/page_title_helper.rb:
PageTitleHelper.formats[:with_company] = ":title from :company - :app"
# show app first for promo pages :)
PageTitleHelper.formats[:promo] = ":app - :title" Then in the view to display a contact:
page_title! @contact.name, :with_companyOr for the promo page via config/locales/en.yml (!):
en:
pages:
features:
title:
- "Features comparison"
- !ruby/sym promoPretty, cool, ain't it? The special format: :app works also via the formats
hash. Then there is also a :default format, which can be used to override the
default format.
| Option | Description | Default | Values |
|---|---|---|---|
:app |
Specify the applications name, however it's recommended to define it via translation key :'app.name'. |
Inflected from Rails.root |
string |
:default |
String which is displayed when no translation exists and no custom title has been specified. Can also be set to a symbol or array to take advantage of I18n.translate's :default option. |
'app.tagline' |
string, symbol or array of those |
:format |
Defines the output format, accepts a string containing multiple interpolations, or a symbol to a format alias, see More fun with :format. If set to false, just the current title is returned. |
:default |
string, symbol |
Options can be set globally via PageTitleHelper.options. Note, currently it
only makes sense to set :default globally.
To add or change formats use:
# change the default format used (if no format is specified):
PageTitleHelper.formats[:default] = ":title // :app"
# add a custom format alias (which can be used with page_title(format: :promo))
PageTitleHelper.formats[:promo] = ":app // :title"Note: It's recommended to add this kind of stuff to an initializer, like e.g.
config/initializers/page_title_helper.rb.
The internationalized controller name, with fallback to just display the humanized name:
PageTitleHelper.interpolates :controller do |env|
c = env[:view].controller
I18n.t(c.controller_path.tr('/', '.') + '.controller', default: c.controller_name.humanize)
endNote: Put this kind of stuff into an initializer, like
config/initializers/page_title_helper.rb or something like that.
Copyright (c) 2009 Lukas Westermann (Zurich, Switzerland), released under the MIT license