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Kaminari is a Scope & Engine based, clean, powerful, customizable and sophisticated paginator for Rails 3
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 Dependencies

Development

~> 1.2
>= 1.0.0
>= 0.4.1.1
>= 1.5.2
= 2.0.0.rc.7
>= 3.0.3
>= 0
>= 1.0.2
>= 2.5.0
>= 2.5.0
>= 1.3.3
>= 1.1.0

Runtime

>= 3.0.0
 Project Readme

Kaminari¶ ↑

A Scope & Engine based, clean, powerful, customizable and sophisticated paginator for Rails 3

Features¶ ↑

Clean¶ ↑

Does not globally pollute Array, Hash, Object or AR::Base.

Easy to use¶ ↑

Just bundle the gem, then your models are ready to be paginated. No configuration required. Don’t have to define anything in your models or helpers.

Simple scope-based API¶ ↑

Everything is method chainable with less “Hasheritis”. You know, that’s the Rails 3 way. No special collection class or anything for the paginated values, instead using a general AR::Relation instance. So, of course you can chain any other conditions before or after the paginator scope.

Customizable engine-based I18n-aware helper¶ ↑

As the whole pagination helper is basically just a collection of links and non-links, Kaminari renders each of them through its own partial template inside the Engine. So, you can easily modify their behaviour, style or whatever by overriding partial templates.

ORM & template engine agnostic¶ ↑

Kaminari supports multiple ORMs (ActiveRecord, Mongoid) and multiple template engines (ERB, Haml).

Modern¶ ↑

The pagination helper outputs the HTML5 <nav> tag by default. Plus, the helper supports Rails 3 unobtrusive Ajax.

Supported versions¶ ↑

  • Ruby 1.8.7, 1.9.2, 1.9.3 (trunk)

  • Rails 3.0.x, 3.1 (edge)

  • Haml 3

  • Mongoid 2 (beta)

Install¶ ↑

Put this line in your Gemfile:

gem 'kaminari'

Then bundle:

% bundle

Usage¶ ↑

Query Basics¶ ↑

  • the page scope

    To fetch the 7th page of users (default per_page is 25)

    User.page(7)
    
  • the per scope

    To show a lot more users per each page (change the per_page value)

    User.page(7).per(50)
    

    Note that the per scope is not directly defined on the models but is just a method defined on the page scope. This is absolutely reasonable because you will never actually use per_page without specifying the page number.

Configuring default per_page value for each model¶ ↑

  • paginates_per

    You can specify default per_page value per each model using the following declarative DSL.

    class User < ActiveRecord::Base
      paginates_per 50
    end
    

Controllers¶ ↑

  • the page parameter is in params[:page]

    Typically, your controller code will look like this:

    @users = User.order(:name).page params[:page]
    

Views¶ ↑

  • the same old helper method

    Just call the paginate helper:

    <%= paginate @users %>

    This will render several ?page=N pagination links surrounded by an HTML5 <nav> tag.

Helper Options¶ ↑

  • specifing the “inner window” size (4 by default)

    <%= paginate @users, :window => 2 %>

    This would output something like ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... when 7 is the current page.

  • specifing the “outer window” size (1 by default)

    <%= paginate @users, :outer_window => 3 %>

    This would output something like 1 2 3 4 ...(snip)... 17 18 19 20 while having 20 pages in total.

  • outer window can be separetely specified by left, right (1 by default)

    <%= paginate @users, :left => 0, :right => 2 %>

    This would output something like 1 ...(snip)... 18 19 20 while having 20 pages in total.

  • changing the parameter name (:param_name) for the links

    <%= paginate @users, :param_name => :pagina

    This would modify the query parameter name on each links.

  • extra parameters (:params) for the links

    <%= paginate @users, :params => {:controller => 'foo', :action => 'bar'}

    This would modify each link’s url_option. :controller and :action might be the keys in common.

  • Ajax links (crazy simple, but works perfectly!)

    <%= paginate @users, :remote => true %>

    This would add data-remote="true" to all the links inside.

I18n and labels¶ ↑

The default labels for ‘previous’, ‘…’ and ‘next’ are stored in the I18n yaml inside the engine, and rendered through I18n API. You can switch the label value per I18n.locale for your internationalized application. Keys and the default values are the following. You can override them by adding to a YAML file in your Rails.root/config/locales directory.

en:
  views:
    pagination:
      previous: "&laquo; Prev"
      next: "Next &raquo;"
      truncate: "..."

Customizing the pagination helper¶ ↑

Kaminari includes a handy template generator.

  • to edit your paginator

    Run the generator first,

    % rails g kaminari:views default

    then edit the partials in your app’s app/views/kaminari/ directory.

  • for Haml users

    Haml templates generator is also available by adding the -e haml option (this is automatically invoked when the default template_engine is set to Haml).

    % rails g kaminari:views default -e haml
  • themes

    The generator has the ability to fetch several sample template themes from the external repository (github.com/amatsuda/kaminari_themes) in addition to the bundled “default” one, which will help you creating a nice looking paginator.

    % rails g kaminari:views THEME

    To see the full list of avaliable themes, take a look at the themes repository, or just hit the generator without specifying THEME argument.

    % rails g kaminari:views

For more information¶ ↑

Check out Kaminari recipes on the GitHub Wiki for more advanced tips and techniques. github.com/amatsuda/kaminari/wiki/Kaminari-recipes

Questions, Feedback¶ ↑

Feel free to message me on Github (amatsuda) or Twitter (@a_matsuda) ☇☇☇ :)

Contributing to Kaminari¶ ↑

  • Fork, fix, then send me a pull request.

Copyright © 2011 Akira Matsuda. See LICENSE.txt for further details.