In HAML I have hundreds of lines like the following:
- xyz = someFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)
and elsewhere
%div{‘id’ => xyz}
The above lines work fine.
Attempting to keep things DRY (Don’t repeat yourself) I want to do
something like
- eval(otherFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’))
where
otherFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)
returns
“xyz = someFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)”
When I do this, HAML no longer sees xyz as being defined when it
attempts to interpret
%div{‘id’ => xyz}
What am I doing wrong???
On Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 3:05 PM, Ralph S. [email protected]
wrote:
returns
“xyz = someFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)”
When I do this, HAML no longer sees xyz as being defined when it
attempts to interpret
%div{‘id’ => xyz}
What am I doing wrong???
Defining variables on the views.
You should define those variables in the controllers and then have
them in the views or partials passing them as locals if necessary.
–
Leonardo M…
There’s no place like ~
On Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 10:05 AM, Ralph S. [email protected]
wrote:
In HAML I have hundreds of lines like the following:
- xyz = someFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)
and elsewhere
%div{‘id’ => xyz}
The above lines work fine.
it will help if you can post a ‘gist’
https://gist.github.com
–
make haste slowly
festina lente \
mobile +1_415_632_6001
[email protected]
http://robotarmyma.de
Marnen Laibow-Koser wrote in post #969841:
You’re using eval (almost never necessary in Ruby –
send is usually what you want).
How in Ruby does one create a variable and then set a value for it
without using eval?
That is, I have a string named “xyz” and I want to create a variable
named xyz and assign the string “abc” to it.
Ralph S. wrote in post #969835:
In HAML I have hundreds of lines like the following:
- xyz = someFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)
and elsewhere
%div{‘id’ => xyz}
The above lines work fine.
Attempting to keep things DRY (Don’t repeat yourself) I want to do
something like
- eval(otherFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’))
where
otherFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)
returns
“xyz = someFuncThatReturnsString(‘xyz’)”
When I do this, HAML no longer sees xyz as being defined when it
attempts to interpret
%div{‘id’ => xyz}
What am I doing wrong???
Almost everything. You’re using eval (almost never necessary in Ruby –
send is usually what you want). You’re using eval in the view (breaking
MVC). You’re using dynamic element IDs (questionable but sometimes
necessary). You’re using camelCase (poor style for Ruby).
And most importantly, you’re asking a question that is so abstract that
it has little to do with your actual goal.
So…what are you actually trying to achieve here? What’s your actual
code like? What errors or unexpected behavior are you getting?
Best,
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]
Sent from my iPhone
Ralph S. wrote in post #970469:
Marnen Laibow-Koser wrote in post #969841:
You’re using eval (almost never necessary in Ruby –
send is usually what you want).
How in Ruby does one create a variable and then set a value for it
without using eval?
There are several methods to do just that. But I don’t think that’s
actually what you want here.
That is, I have a string named “xyz” and I want to create a variable
named xyz and assign the string “abc” to it.
As I said in my earlier post, I think you’re approaching this wrong.
Please give more information about what you’re actually trying to
achieve (rather than the surrogate goal you’ve set for yourself) and
we’ll see what we can come up with. (You probably don’t need those
variables in the first place.)
Best,
Marnen Laibow-Koser
http://www.marnen.org
[email protected]
Sent from my iPhone