HTML Rendering

Matestack’s rendering mechanism takes care of converting Ruby into HTML:

div class: "card shadow-sm border-0 bg-light", foo: "bar" do
  img path: "...", class: "w-100"
  div class: "card-body" do
    h5 "foo", class: "card-title"
    paragraph "bar", class: "card-text"
  end
end

will be rendered to:

<div class="card shadow-sm border-0 bg-light" foo="bar">
  <img src="..." class="w-100">
  <div class="card-body">
    <h5 class="card-title">foo</h5>
    <p class="card-text">bar</p>
  </div>
</div>

That's working because matestack-ui-core defines all kind of Ruby methods targeting Rails ActionView tag helper, rendering the desired HTML tag and content as a String.

Following tags are supported:

Supported HTML Tags

Void Tags

These tags by definition do not allow an inner HTML and therefore do not take an block but all kinds of tag attributes, e.g.:

# ...
hr class: "some-class"
# ...
  • area

  • base

  • br

  • col

  • hr

  • img | you can use src or path in order to reference the url to the image

  • input

  • link

  • meta

  • param

  • command

  • keygen

  • source

Tags

The following tags take content via a block OR first (non-hash) argument and all kind of tag attributes, e.g.:

# define inner HTML via a block
span class: "some-class" do
  plain "foo"
end
# OR: define inner HTML via a simple first non-hash argument 
span "foo", class: "some-class"
# ...
  • a | you can use href or path in order to reference the url of the link

  • abbr

  • acronym

  • address

  • applet

  • article

  • aside

  • audio

  • b

  • base

  • basefont

  • bdi

  • bdo

  • big

  • blockquote

  • body

  • button

  • canvas

  • caption

  • center

  • cite

  • code

  • col

  • colgroup

  • data

  • datalist

  • dd

  • del

  • details

  • dfn

  • dialog

  • dir

  • div

  • dl

  • dt

  • em

  • embed

  • fieldset

  • figcaption

  • figure

  • font

  • footer

  • form

  • frame

  • frameset

  • h1 | also available via heading size: 1

  • h2 | also available via heading size: 2

  • h3 | also available via heading size: 3

  • h4 | also available via heading size: 4

  • h5 | also available via heading size: 5

  • h6 | also available via heading size: 6

  • head

  • header

  • html

  • i

  • iframe

  • ins

  • kbd

  • label

  • legend

  • li

  • main

  • map

  • mark

  • meter

  • nav

  • noframes

  • noscript

  • object

  • ol

  • optgroup

  • option

  • output

  • paragraph | p is not working as it's an alias for puts in Ruby core

  • picture

  • pre

  • progress

  • q

  • rp

  • rt

  • ruby

  • s

  • samp

  • script

  • section

  • select

  • small

  • span

  • strike

  • strong

  • style

  • sub

  • summary

  • sup

  • svg

  • table

  • tbody

  • td

  • template

  • textarea

  • tfoot

  • th

  • thead

  • time

  • title

  • tr

  • track

  • tt

  • u

  • ul

  • var

  • video

  • wbr

Text Rendering

In order to render plain text, do:

#...
plain "hello world!"
# "hello world!" alone would not be rendered!
#...

Tag/Data Attributes

Matestack's rendering mechanism automatically renders all given options as tag attributes. For convenience, data attributes can be passend in within a data hash:

div class: "foo", id: "bar", hello: "world", data: { foo: "bar" } do
  #...
end
<div class="foo" id="bar" hello="world" data-foo="bar">
  <!-- ... -->
</div>

Rails View Helpers

Using Rails view helpers (https://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Helpers.html) in components, pages and apps is supported with some limitations currently. You just have to put a plain before a view helper, if this view helper is rendering a HTML string, for example:

plain link_to "Show", post_path(@post)

A component needs to be called in context of a controller (with included Matestack::Ui::Core::Helper), which is true when you're calling components of Rails views or on Matestack Pages (which are themselves called by a controller normally).

When calling a component in isolation (which is possible), the view helpers might not work properly!

It's currently not possible to use view helpers requiring a block, such as the form_for. We're working on supporting them soon!

Custom HTML Tags

If you want to use HTML tags which are not supported by Matestack's rendering mechanism by default, you can call ActionView's tag helper manually:

https://apidock.com/rails/ActionView/Helpers/TagHelper/tag

plain tag.xyz("foo")

will render:

<xyz>foo</xyz>

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