A good, simple, solid tagging extension for ActiveRecord.
This was initially built partly as a proof-of-concept, partly to see how a tagging gem could work when it's not all stuffed within models, and partly just because I wanted a simpler tagging library. It's now a solid little tagging Rails engine.
If you want to know more, read this blog post.
The first step is easy: add the tag associations to whichever models should have tags (in these examples, the Article model):
class Article < ActiveRecord::Base
# ...
Gutentag::ActiveRecord.call self
# ...
end
That's all it takes to get a tags association on each article. Of course, populating tags can be a little frustrating, unless you want to manage Gutentag::Tag instances yourself? As an alternative, just use the tag_names accessor to get/set tags via string representations.
article.tag_names #=> ['pancakes', 'melbourne', 'ruby']
article.tag_names << 'portland'
article.tag_names #=> ['pancakes', 'melbourne', 'ruby', 'portland']
article.tag_names -= ['ruby']
article.tag_names #=> ['pancakes', 'melbourne', 'portland']
Changes to tag_names are not persisted immediately - you must save your taggable object to have the tag changes reflected in your database:
article.tag_names << 'ruby'
article.save
You can also query for instances with specified tags. The default :match
mode is :any
, and so provides OR logic, not AND - it'll match any instances that have any of the tags or tag names:
Article.tagged_with(:names => ['tag1', 'tag2'], :match => :any)
Article.tagged_with(
:tags => Gutentag::Tag.where(name: ['tag1', 'tag2']),
:match => :any
)
Article.tagged_with(:ids => [tag_id], :match => :any)
To return records that have all specified tags, use :match => :all
:
# Returns all articles that have *both* tag_a and tag_b.
Article.tagged_with(:ids => [tag_a.id, tag_b.id], :match => :all)
These are the versions the test suite runs against. It's possible it may work on older versions of Ruby, but it definitely won't work on older versions of Rails.
- Ruby: MRI v2.2-v2.5, JRuby v9.1
- Rails/ActiveRecord: v3.2-v5.2
Get it into your Gemfile - and don't forget the version constraint!
gem 'gutentag', '~> 2.1.0'
Next: your tags get persisted to your database, so let's import and run the migrations to get the tables set up:
rake gutentag:install:migrations
rake db:migrate
If you want to use Gutentag outside of Rails, you can. However, there are two caveats:
- You'll want to invoke this code once ActiveRecord's connected to the database:
ActiveSupport.run_load_hooks :gutentag
- And you'll want to set up your database with the same schema (as importing in the migrations isn't possible without Rails). The schema from 0.7.0 onwards is below:
create_table :gutentag_taggings do |t|
t.integer :tag_id, null: false
t.integer :taggable_id, null: false
t.string :taggable_type, null: false
t.timestamps null: false
end
add_index :gutentag_taggings, :tag_id
add_index :gutentag_taggings, [:taggable_type, :taggable_id]
add_index :gutentag_taggings, [:taggable_type, :taggable_id, :tag_id],
unique: true, name: 'unique_taggings'
create_table :gutentag_tags do |t|
t.string :name, null: false
t.integer :taggings_count, null: false, default: 0
t.timestamps null: false
end
add_index :gutentag_tags, :name, unique: true
add_index :gutentag_tags, :taggings_count
Please refer to the CHANGELOG, which covers significant and breaking changes between versions.
Gutentag tries to take a convention-over-configuration approach, while also striving to be modular enough to allow changes to behaviour in certain cases.
The default validations on Gutentag::Tag
are:
- presence of the tag name.
- case-insensitive uniqueness of the tag name.
- maximum length of the tag name (if the column has a limit).
You can view the logic for this in Gutentag::TagValidations
, and you can set an alternative if you wish:
Gutentag.tag_validations = CustomTagValidations
The supplied value must respond to call
, and the argument supplied is the model.
Tag normalisation is used to convert supplied tag values consistently into string tag names. The default is to convert the value into a string, and then to lower-case.
If you want to do something different, provide an object that responds to call and accepts a single value to Gutentag.normaliser
:
Gutentag.normaliser = lambda { |value| value.to_s.upcase }
Gutentag ignores case by default, but can be customised to be case-sensitive by supplying your own validations and normaliser, as outlined by Robin Mehner in issue 42. Further changes may be required for your schema though, depending on your database.
Please note that this project now has a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
Copyright (c) 2013-2015, Gutentag is developed and maintained by Pat Allan, and is released under the open MIT Licence.