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An easy way to add common finders to your Rails controllers.
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 Dependencies

Runtime

> 2.0.1
> 0.5.6
> 0.4.0
 Project Readme
= Synthesis

An easy way to add common finders to your Rails controllers.

== Installation

Install the gem directly:

  sudo gem install pelargir-finder_filter --source=http://gems.github.com
  
Or install the gem in your Rails project:
  
  script/plugin install git://github.com/pelargir/finder_filter.git

Or clone the project:

  git clone git://github.com/pelargir/finder_filter.git

== Usage

finder_filter is intended to replace one-off before filters that you might
commonly write in your Rails controllers. For example:

  class UsersController < ActionController::Base
    before_filter :find_user, :only => [:show, :edit]
    
    def show
      # do something with @user
    end
    
    def edit
      # do something with @user
    end
    
    def find_user
      @user = User.find(params[:id)
    end
  end

finder_filter reduces this pattern to a single line:

  class UsersController < ActionController::Base
    finder_filter :only => [:show, :edit]
    
    def show; end
    def edit; end
  end
  
Or, if you want to specify the model to find:

  class UsersController < ActionController::Base
    finder_filter :person, :only => [:show, :edit]
    
    def show; end
    def edit; end
  end

To find based on a column other than ID:

  finder_filter :user, :by => :name
    # equivalent to:
    #   @user = User.find_by_name(params[:id])

To find based on a param other than ID:

  finder_filter :user, :param => :permalink
    # equivalent to:
    #   @user = User.find(params[:permalink])

You can specify that prepend_before_filter is used:

	finder_filter :user, :only => [:show, :edit], :prepend => true
		# generates:
		#		prepend_before_filter :find_user, :only => [:show, :edit]

The standard Rails :only and :except options can also be used:

  before_filter :find_user, :only => [:show, :edit]
  before_filter :find_user, :except => [:index]

== Resource Nesting

If your controller is a nested resource, you might want the find
to be performed on the parent model. For example:

  class PostsController < ActionController::Base
    before_filter :find_post

    def find_post
      @topic = Topic.find(params[:topic_id])
      @post = @topic.posts.find(params[:id])
    end
  end
  
This can be easily handled using finder_filter:

  finder_filter :nested => :topic

Nested resources will only do a find on the parent model if the parent id is supplied.
This allows you to handle routing setups like this:

map.resources :posts
map.resources :topics do |topic|
  topic.resources :posts
end

With this setup, both /posts/1 and /topics/1/posts/2 will be valid URLs, and will do the 
right thing if you include 

finder_filter :nested => :topic

in your Posts controller.

== from_param

If you have Michael Bleigh's from_param (http://github.com/mbleigh/from_param/tree/master)
installed, finder_filter will work transparently with it. This gives you the dual benefit
of SEO-friendly URLs and DRY controller code.

== Tests

To run the tests, you must have the mocha, test-spec, and sqlite3 gems installed.

  rake test

== Dependencies

actionpack > 2.0.1

== Author

  Matthew Bass
    email: pelargir at gmail dot com
    blog: http://matthewbass.com

== Contributors

Kevin Smith, Steve Mohapi-Banks