A website template with lots of features, built with ruby on rails.

friendly_id.rb 3.1KB

    # FriendlyId Global Configuration # # Use this to set up shared configuration options for your entire application. # Any of the configuration options shown here can also be applied to single # models by passing arguments to the `friendly_id` class method or defining # methods in your model. # # To learn more, check out the guide: # # http://norman.github.io/friendly_id/file.Guide.html FriendlyId.defaults do |config| # ## Reserved Words # # Some words could conflict with Rails's routes when used as slugs, or are # undesirable to allow as slugs. Edit this list as needed for your app. config.use :reserved config.reserved_words = %w(new edit index session login logout users admin stylesheets assets javascripts images) # ## Friendly Finders # # Uncomment this to use friendly finders in all models. By default, if # you wish to find a record by its friendly id, you must do: # # MyModel.friendly.find('foo') # # If you uncomment this, you can do: # # MyModel.find('foo') # # This is significantly more convenient but may not be appropriate for # all applications, so you must explicity opt-in to this behavior. You can # always also configure it on a per-model basis if you prefer. # # Something else to consider is that using the :finders addon boosts # performance because it will avoid Rails-internal code that makes runtime # calls to `Module.extend`. # # config.use :finders # # ## Slugs # # Most applications will use the :slugged module everywhere. If you wish # to do so, uncomment the following line. # # config.use :slugged # # By default, FriendlyId's :slugged addon expects the slug column to be named # 'slug', but you can change it if you wish. # # config.slug_column = 'slug' # # When FriendlyId can not generate a unique ID from your base method, it appends # a UUID, separated by a single dash. You can configure the character used as the # separator. If you're upgrading from FriendlyId 4, you may wish to replace this # with two dashes. # # config.sequence_separator = '-' # # ## Tips and Tricks # # ### Controlling when slugs are generated # # As of FriendlyId 5.0, new slugs are generated only when the slug field is # nil, but if you're using a column as your base method can change this # behavior by overriding the `should_generate_new_friendly_id` method that # FriendlyId adds to your model. The change below makes FriendlyId 5.0 behave # more like 4.0. # # config.use Module.new { # def should_generate_new_friendly_id? # slug.blank? || <your_column_name_here>_changed? # end # } # # FriendlyId uses Rails's `parameterize` method to generate slugs, but for # languages that don't use the Roman alphabet, that's not usually suffient. Here # we use the Babosa library to transliterate Russian Cyrillic slugs to ASCII. If # you use this, don't forget to add "babosa" to your Gemfile. # # config.use Module.new { # def normalize_friendly_id(text) # text.to_slug.normalize! :transliterations => [:russian, :latin] # end # } end