I am writing a custom wrapper for open_flash_chart
plugin. It\'s placed in /lib
and load it as a module in ApplicationController
.
It might be the case that you want to explicitly load file(s) under lib directory at time of application initialization.
In my config/application.rb, I have an entry as, config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/lib)
Also this might be the case that module name/hierarchy is not same as it is in file or location/name of file is not same as that hierarchy, so auto-load of that file is also not possible. So when I added an entry at bottom of config/application.rb as, require "./lib/file_name_without_extention
it worked fine.
In Rails 3 /lib modules are not loaded automatically.
This is because the line:
# config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/extras)
inside config/application.rb is commented.
You can try to uncomment this line or, (it worked even better for me), leave this commented (for future reference) and add this two lines:
config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/lib)
config.autoload_paths += Dir["#{config.root}/lib/**/"]
What worked for me, besides uncommenting config.autoload_paths (I’m on Rails 3.1.3), was to create a initializer like this:
#config/initializers/myapp_init.rb
require 'my_module'
include MyModule
This way I can call mymodule methods from anywhere and as class methods Model.mymodule_method
or as instance methods mymodel.mymodule_method
Maybe some expert may explain the implications of this. By now, use it at your own risk.
Edit: Afterwards, I think a better approuch would be:
create a initializer like this:
#config/initializers/myapp_init.rb
require ‘my_module’
Include the module where needed, like this:
1) if you want to use it as "Class Methods" use "extend":
class Myclass < ActiveRecord::Base
extend MyModule
def self.method1
Myclass.my_module_method
end
end
2) if you want to use it as "Instance Methods" include it inside Class definition:
class Myclass < ActiveRecord::Base
include MyModule
def method1
self.my_module_method
end
end
3) remember that include MyModule
refers to a file my_module.rb
in your load path that must be required first
There are two ways that files get loaded in Rails:
app/controllers/pages_controller.rb
and reference PagesController, app/controllers/pages_controller.rb
will automatically be loaded. This happens for a preset list of directories in the load path. This is a feature of Rails, and is not part of the normal Ruby load process.require
d. If a file is require
d, Ruby looks through the entire list of paths in your load paths, and find the first case where the file you require
d is in the load path. You can see the entire load path by inspecting $LOAD_PATH (an alias for $:).Since lib
is in your load path, you have two options: either name your files with the same names as the constants, so Rails will automatically pick them up when you reference the constant in question, or explicitly require the module.
I also notice that you might be confused about another thing. ApplicationController is not the root object in the system. Observe:
module MyModule
def im_awesome
puts "#{self} is so awesome"
end
end
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
include MyModule
end
class AnotherClass
end
AnotherClass.new.im_awesome
# NoMethodError: undefined method `im_awesome' for #<AnotherClass:0x101208ad0>
You will need to include the module into whatever class you want to use it in.
class AnotherClass
include MyModule
end
AnotherClass.new.im_awesome
# AnotherClass is so awesome
Of course, in order to be able to include the module in the first place, you'll need to have it available (using either of the techniques above).
To use the module lib/my_module.rb
in your models and controllers:
In config/application.rb
:
config.watchable_dirs['lib'] = [:rb]
In your model (similar idea for your controller):
require_dependency 'my_module'
class MyModel < ActiveRecord::Base
include MyModule
MyModule.some_method
end
This method is described in more detail at http://hakunin.com/rails3-load-paths