Posted on the October 7th, 2008 under My Projects,programming,Ruby on Rails by John

I used Paperclip for my latest project, and I figured I would give a brief tutorial on how to use it.

Paperclip – Paperclip is intended as an easy file attachment library for ActiveRecord. The intent behind it was to keep setup as easy as possible and to treat files as much like other attributes as possible. http://github.com/thoughtbot/paperclip/tree/master

In my case, I wanted to allow an attachment to an Event, which will have one photo.

To install:

script / plugin install git: // github. com / thoughtbot / paperclip. git

Create your migration, again in my case I was adding the images to my Events model / DB, so I did the following:

script / generate migration AddPhotosToEvents

Open up your newly created migration with your favorite Text editor, and add the following:

class AddPhotoToEvent < ActiveRecord::Migration def self . up add_column :events , :photo_file_name , :string add_column :events , :photo_content_type , :string add_column :events , :photo_file_size , :integer end def self . down remove_column :events , :photo_file_name remove_column :events , :photo_content_type remove_column :events , :photo_file_size end end

Then rake your migration so the new columns are added to your database:

rake db:migrate

Next you need to tell your model to use Paperclip, again I am using the Event model as an example, the #Paperclip and below is what you need to add. If you notice below I added 4 options to the :styles. I wanted to have a few different sizes generated when a image was uploaded, i named them appropriately (you can name them whatever you wish). Please note when you put a # on the end it signifies that you want that exact aspect ratio, it will crop your photo automatically. When you use > on the end it will make the largest side the size you specify and keep the aspect ratio uploaded. In addition note that because we specified has_attached_file :photo its going to look for that naming convention we created in the migration above. In addition it uses that name to store your photo in the public folder of your application. So our photo url is going to be as follows: /public/photos/(event#)/(size_name)/image_name

class Event < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :user validates_presence_of :title , :on => :create , :message => "can't be blank" validates_presence_of :teaser , :on => :create , :message => "can't be blank" validates_presence_of :subject , :on => :create , :message => "can't be blank" # Paperclip has_attached_file :photo , :styles => { :thumb => "100x100#" , :small => "150x150>" , :medium => "300x300>" , :large => "400x400>" }

Next you need to make sure you put the html => { :multipart => true } in both your edit and new views for the model you are working with. Example in my case:

<% form_for ( @event,:html => { :multipart => true } ) do | f | %> <% = f. error_messages %> <% = render :partial => 'form' , :locals => { :f => f } %> <% end %>

You then need to add the file_field to your new and edit forms or your _form partial like in my case:

<p> <%= f.label 'Photo' %><br /> <%= f.file_field :photo %> </p>

Next up is deciding on how you are going to use / view your images. In my case I wanted to show a few different sizes in the Event view. I also wanted to make sure I am only going to show photo’s if one exists. In this example I am just showing the small and medium sizes we generated:

<% if @event.photo.exists? then %> <p>Small:<%= image_tag @event.photo.url(:small) %></p> <p>Medium:<%= image_tag @event.photo.url(:medium) %></p> <% else %> <p> There are no photo's attached, upload one. </p> <% end %>

A few other notes…

Calling @event.photo.nil destroys the photo

Also checkout this great tutorial Jim put up here.



Thats all for now, I’ll try to post an update with some more options / features when using the Paperclip plugin in the future.

*** Checkout my other tutorial on polymorphic paperclip if you would like to have multiple image attachments.



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