Use wicked to make your Rails controllers into step-by-step wizards. To see Wicked in action check out the example Rails app or watch the screencast.
Many times I'm left wanting a RESTful way to display a step by step process that may or not be associated with a resource. Wicked gives the flexibility to do what I want while hiding all the really nasty stuff you shouldn't do in a controller to make this possible. At it's core Wicked is a RESTful(ish) state machine, but you don't need to know that, just use it.
Add this to your Gemfile
gem 'wicked'
Then run bundle install
and you're ready to start
- Build an object step-by-step
- Use object ID's with wizard paths
- Show Current Wizard Progress to User
- Example App
- Screencast
- Watch Railscasts episode: #346 Wizard Forms with Wicked
We are going to build an 'after signup' wizard. First create a controller:
rails g controller after_signup
Add Routes into config/routes.rb
:
resources :after_signup
Next include Wicked::Wizard
in your controller
class AfterSignupController < ApplicationController
include Wicked::Wizard
steps :confirm_password, :confirm_profile, :find_friends
# ...
You can also use the old way of inheriting from Wicked::WizardController
.
class AfterSignupController < Wicked::WizardController
steps :confirm_password, :confirm_profile, :find_friends
# ...
The wizard is set to call steps in order in the show action, you can specify custom logic in your show using a case statement like below. To send someone to the first step in this wizard we can direct them to after_signup_path(:confirm_password)
.
class AfterSignupController < ApplicationController
include Wicked::Wizard
steps :confirm_password, :confirm_profile, :find_friends
def show
@user = current_user
case step
when :find_friends
@friends = @user.find_friends
end
render_wizard
end
end
Note: Wicked uses the :id
parameter to control the flow of steps, if you need to have an id parameter, please use nested routes see building objects with wicked for an example. It will need to be prefixed, for example a Product's :id
would be :product_id
You'll need to call render_wizard
at the end of your action to get the correct views to show up.
By default the wizard will render a view with the same name as the step. So for our controller AfterSignupController
with a view path of /views/after_signup/
if call the :confirm_password step, our wizard will render /views/after_signup/confirm_password.html.erb
Then in your view you can use the helpers to get to the next step.
<%= link_to 'skip', next_wizard_path %>
You can manually specify which wizard action you want to link to by using the wizard_path helper.
<%= link_to 'skip', wizard_path(:find_friends) %>
In addition to showing sequential views we can update elements in our controller.
class AfterSignupController < ApplicationController
include Wicked::Wizard
steps :confirm_password, :confirm_profile, :find_friends
def update
@user = current_user
case step
when :confirm_password
@user.update_attributes(params[:user])
end
sign_in(@user, :bypass => true) # needed for devise
render_wizard @user
end
end
We're passing render_wizard
our @user
object here. If you pass an object into render_wizard
it will show the next step if the object saves or re-render the previous view if it does not save.
To get to this update action, you simply need to submit a form that PUT's to the same url
<%= form_for @user, :url => wizard_path, :method => :put do |f| %>
<%= f.password_field :password %>
<%= f.password_field :password_confirmation %>
<%= f.submit "Change Password" %>
<% end %>
We explicitly tell the form to PUT above. If you forget this, you will get a warning about the create action not existing, or no route found for POST. Don't forget this.
In the controller if you find that you want to skip a step, you can do it simply by calling skip_step
def show
@user = current_user
case step
when :find_friends
if @user.has_facebook_access_token?
@friends = @user.find_friends
else
skip_step
end
end
render_wizard
end
Now you've got a fully functioning AfterSignup controller! If you have questions or if you struggled with something, let me know on twitter, and i'll try to make it better or make the docs better.
View/URL Helpers
wizard_path # Grabs the current path in the wizard
wizard_path(:specific_step) # Url of the :specific_step
next_wizard_path # Url of the next step
previous_wizard_path # Url of the previous step
# These only work while in a Wizard, and are not absolute paths
# You can have multiple wizards in a project with multiple `wizard_path` calls
Controller Tidbits:
steps :first, :second # Sets the order of steps
step # Gets symbol of current step
next_step # Gets symbol of next step
skip_step # Tells render_wizard to skip to the next logical step
render_wizard # Renders the current step
render_wizard(@user) # Shows next_step if @user.save, otherwise renders current step
Finally:
Don't forget to create your named views
app/
views/
controller_name/
first.html.erb
second.html.erb
# ...
You can specify the url that your user goes to by over-riding the finish_wizard_path
in your wizard controller.
def finish_wizard_path
user_path(current_user)
end
# Test find_friends block of show action
get :show, :id => :find_friends
# Test find_friends block of update action
put :update, {'id' => 'find_friends', "user" => { "id" => @user.id.to_s }}
Please poke around the source code, if you see easier ways to get a Rails controller do do what I want, let me know.
If you have a question file an issue or, find me on the Twitters @schneems.
This project rocks and uses MIT-LICENSE.