Revisions of #307

Contributors: Dennis Hackethal

If so, there might be a way to bind them to the view_context. Or I could definitely pass the view_context explicitly as the first parameter.

Version 1·#307·Dennis Hackethal·about 1 year ago·Criticism
1 comment: #309

If so, there might be a way to bind them to the view_context. Or I could definitely pass the view_context explicitly as the first parameter.

If so, there might be a way to bind them to the view_context. Or I could definitely pass the view_context explicitly as the first parameter:

So instead of

@helper_module.instance_method(@action_name).bind_call(view_context)

I would do

@helper_module.send(@action_name, view_context)

And the parameter list of each Hiccdown method would start accordingly:

module ProductsHelper
  def self.index vc #, …
    # …
  end
end
Version 2·#308·Dennis Hackethal·about 1 year ago·Criticism
1 comment: #311

If so, there might be a way to bind them to the view_context. Or I could definitely pass the view_context explicitly as the first parameter:

So instead of

@helper_module.instance_method(@action_name).bind_call(view_context)

I would do

@helper_module.send(@action_name, view_context)

And the parameter list of each Hiccdown method would start accordingly:

module ProductsHelper
  def self.index vc #, …
    # …
  end
end

If so, there might be a way to bind them to the view_context. Or I could definitely pass the view_context explicitly as the first parameter:

So instead of

@helper_module.instance_method(@action_name).bind_call(view_context)

I would do

@helper_module.send(@action_name, view_context)

And the parameter list of each Hiccdown method would start accordingly:

module ProductsHelper
  def self.index vc #, …
    vc.some_helper_method
  end

  def some_helper_method
    # …
  end
end
Version 3·#310·Dennis Hackethal·about 1 year ago·Criticism