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-- model | |
some sort of constant hash: | |
HASH_NAME = { | |
0 => "Choose:", | |
1 => "On-Campus Recruiting - CSO",· | |
2 => "CSO Staff Referral", | |
3 => "Faculty Contact",· | |
4 => "Career Day",· | |
5 => "CSO Summer Job Listing",· | |
6 => "Alumni Contact",· | |
7 => "Personal Contact",· | |
8 => "Other"· | |
} | |
-- view | |
<%= f.input :some_field, :collection => Model::HASH_NAME.sort.map {|k,v| [v,k]} %> | |
This would output nice select with select-value as hash key and select-name as hash value, such as: | |
<select id="form_application_job_source" class="select required" name="form_application[job_source]"> | |
<option value="0">Choose:</option> | |
<option value="1">On-Campus Recruiting - CSO</option> | |
<option value="2">CSO Staff Referral</option> | |
<option value="3">Faculty Contact</option> | |
<option value="4">Career Day</option> | |
<option value="5">CSO Summer Job Listing</option> | |
<option value="6">Alumni Contact</option> | |
<option selected="selected" value="7">Personal Contact</option> | |
<option value="8">Other</option> | |
</select> |
Perfect! exactly what i was looking for. Thanks!
Appreciate the post. Saved me.
6 months later, still very useful post. Thanks viola and others :).
update for my particular case
Since I needed some translation, only half of my problem was solved. So I ran into this gem https://github.com/brainspec/enumerize and voila. I don't need a collection anymore for my simple_form.
Inspired by this great gist I did the following
MY_LIST = ["Choose:", "On-Campus Recruiting - CSO", "CSO Staff Referral","Faculty Contact", "Career Day", "CSO Summer Job Listing", "Alumni Contact", "Personal Contact", "Other"]
HASH_NAME = Hash[MY_LIST.map.with_index{ |obj, i| [i, obj] }]
This let me manage the list separately and add elements if needed!
I appreciate that!
感謝你!thanks for the tip!
Thank you so much for this!! Saved me a ton of time! :)
Exactly what I needed. Thanks!
wonderful! thank you!
Thanks for this. Very useful!
sort
method is no longer needed in ruby >1.9
Hashes enumerate their values in the order that the corresponding keys were inserted.
http://ruby-doc.org/core-1.9.3/Hash.html
Five years later... it has been really helpful. Gracias!
Amazingly helpful. Saved a ton of time. Thank you!
f.input :some_field, :collection => Model::HASH_NAME, value_method: :first, label_method: :last
6 years later! Thank you so much!
Again. Thanks! Exactly what I needed today.
Thanks! - Helped me troubleshoot getting my MDB select working properly:
"
<%= options_for_select(Customer::PROVINCES.map {|k,v| [v,k]}) %>
Still a relevant and very useful thread, thanks all.
@mahemoff Actually, I just figured it out. I had to
invert
thensort
. Doingsort
first was causing the error.So:
<%= f.input :kind, :collection => ProductComponent::KINDS.invert.sort%>