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Kenny Dialoggins

Hey, there.

I’m Kenny Dialoggins. A lot of people confuse me with the singer who rose to fame in the 1980s, but I’m a different guy altogether.

Don’t get me wrong, that Kenny and I are into a lot of the same things, like manly beards and Miami Vice- inspired attire. But while that Kenny spent his career focused on synth beats and lyrics that cut to the bone, I only care about one thing.

Freakin’ Dialogs.

If you’re a Rails developer who wants to use dialogs but doesn’t want to mess with Javascript, you might want to prep your best friend for some bad news. We’re about to become tight.

Let me lay it out for you. If you want my dialog in one of your views, here’s what you do:

# Create the dialog
<%= render_dialog :danger_zone_dialog, :partial => "danger_zone", :locals => { :pilot => current_user } %>

# Invoke the dialog
<%= link_to_function "Take Me to the Danger Zone", show_dialog(:danger_zone_dialog) %>

That’s pretty much it. Did you notice how render_dialog takes the same options as render? The content for your dialog can just be a regular old partial.

You like that. I can tell. Don’t fight it.

What’s that, you want more details? You got it, buddy.

render_dialog always needs a unique id for its first argument. After that, it will take the same options as ActionController::Base#render. It’ll also take a few more, namely:

  • :id - an element id for the generated dialog. If not provided, the value provided as the first argument to render_dialog will be used.

  • :class - a css class name that will be appended to the outermost div to facilitate multiple styles

  • :before_show - a Javascript function that will be invoked before the dialog is shown

  • :after_show - a Javascript function that will be invoked after the dialog has become visible

  • :before_hide - a Javascript function that will be invoked before the dialog is hidden

  • :after_hide - a Javascript function that will be invoked after the dialog has been hidden

  • &block - HTML markup that will be automatically converted to render’s inline option

Here’s an example using the before_show option:

# Create the dialog with a callback
<%= render_dialog :footloose_dialog, :partial => "footloose", :before_show => "function() { alert('Everybody get footloose!'); }" %>

To invoke the dialog, use unobtrusive javascript to trap a click event and show the dialog.

// invoke the dialog
$("footloose_dialog_link").observe("click", function(evt) {
  KennyDialoggins.Dialog.show("footloose_dialog");
});

Or, if you’re using javascript helper functions, you can use the show/hide helpers to accomplish the same thing.

# Invoke the dialog
<%= link_to_function "Dance party!", show_dialog(:footloose_dialog) %>

If you need more help than that, maybe you should just look at the source code. There are a ton of comments in there.

Your pal,

Kenny Dialoggins

Multiple Dialog Styles

If you need to style more than one kind of dialog, just use the :class option to append a css class name on the outermost div. That’ll give you a logical anchor around which you can restyle all the interior classes.

Please note that the blocking iframe is automatically given an additional class name equal to the outermost div’s class name plus the string “_frame”.

By default, the top-level class assignments are “kenny_dialoggins_dialog” and “kenny_dialoggins_dialog_frame”.

If you set the :class option to :error_dialog, the top-level class assignments will be “kenny_dialoggins_dialog error_dialog” and “kenny_dialoggins_dialog_frame error_dialog_frame”.

IE6 Support

I’m not what you’d call a huge fan of IE6, so I don’t provide a blocking iframe for my dialogs by default. But I can. You just need to ask nicely.

At the top of the generated javascript file, just change the obviously-named property hanging right off of the Kenny D namespace. Like this.

KennyDialoggins.SUPPORT_IE6_BULLSHIT = true;

That’s it. I do the rest.

Prerequisites

To take you to the danger zone, I need my kick ass backup singers Prototype and Scriptaculous.

But since I was designed as a Rails extension, chances are you already have my boys in the mix.

Installation & Generators (Rails 3)

Install me from RubyGems.org by adding a gem dependency to your Gemfile. Bundler does the rest.

gem “kenny_dialoggins” $ bundle install

Then generate the required javascript file and the starter stylesheet.

$ rails g kenny_dialoggins

Installation & Generators (Rails 2)

Install me from RubyGems.org and add a gem dependency in the appropriate file.

$ gem install kenny_dialoggins

Or install me as a plugin.

$ script/plugin install git://github.com/coroutine/kenny_dialoggins.git

Either way, then generate the required javascript file and the starter stylesheet.

$ script/generate kenny_dialoggins

Gemroll

If you think I’m awesome, you should check out my soulmate Michael Hintbuble.

Other gems by Coroutine include:

License

Copyright © 2010 Coroutine LLC.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.