I have a form on my Ruby on Rails3 Application with a drop menu, this is my current code for the select option:
<%= f.select :phone_type, options_for_select([
could be <%= f.select :phone_type, options_for_select(["Cell", "Work", "Office", "Home", "Other"]), :prompt => "Select One", :class => 'genForm_dropBox' %>
Adding the ["Select One", ""] causes the edit screen to alway display "Select One" rather than the stored value. Rails 3.1 (2012 Aug 17)
This is a little cleaner:
<%= f.select :phone_type, [ 'Cell', 'Work', 'Office', 'Home', 'Other' ], :prompt => 'Select One' %>
The :prompt argument generates an option with an empty value.
for those looking to incorporate this feature, I've taken a new approach from the model end of things. Being that all fields are required to be filled out in order for the user to submit and not receive an error alert, I gave the "Submit One" option a default value of nothing. You can take a look at the following code to see how I did that.
<%= f.select :phone_type, options_for_select([["Select One", ""], "Cell", "Work", "Office", "Home", "Other"]), :class => 'genForm_dropBox' %>
In Rails 4, this approach works well for me.
<%= f.select :status, options_for_status, {}, prompt: 'Select One' %>
Meanwhile I have defined the options in a helper to keep the clutter out of my view.
def options_for_status
[
['First Option','first_option'],
['Second Option','second_option']
]
end
Thanks to everyone who contributed an answer.
I needed similar code for a project I'm working on and I really liked the approach Ryan Burnette took.
This is what worked for me using Rails 4.1.0.
<%= f.select :season, options_for_seasons, :prompt => 'Select One' %>
Then I defined the options in my helper.
def options_for_seasons
['Spring', 'Summer', 'Autumn', 'Winter']
end
I went with:prompt => 'Select One'
because I only wanted the "Select One" option to be listed in the edit form if a season had not been previously selected.