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The dynamic reports gem was created to fill a HUGE hole that we felt existed in the
Ruby community - the ability to QUICKLY create stylized admin reports and charts for
people to use to view key metrics and data.
Sample uses include the ability to quickly display sales data if your an eShop, our
site metrics if you are recording your own site visits, or user feedback if you are storing
feedback in a model somewhere.
Basically, with DR you can create a stylized table of ANY information found in a model
(kind of like looking at the grid output from a GUI query analyzer) as well as add Google
Charts API powered line, pie, bar or column charts of any numeric data. All this can
be done by simply creating a report definition and feeding it your data.
While this library is usable in any Ruby application it was made mainly with Rails in mind.
Suppose we have an online store and we wish to add reporting to the admin area quickly and easily.
First we define a report in app/reports/orders_report.rb, something like:
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
end
Then in our admin/reports controller (this can be any controller) we define an action to deliver the report:
def orders
@orders = Order.find(:all, :limit => 25)
render :text => OrdersReport.on(@orders).to_html, :layout => "application"
end
This will render an html table containing some basic styling and containing the columns 'total' and 'created_at' from the order objects.
Note that the report Title will be "Orders Report" and it's name will be :orders_report
Report#on expects that it receives an object that responds to #each and
That each object that it iterates over is either a
* An object
* A Hash
that responds to a method / has keys for each column defined within the report.
Templating engines may also be specified, currently :erb and :haml are supported (we will soon be adding :csv and :pdf) like so:
render :text => OrdersReport.on(@orders).to_html(:engine => :haml), :layout => "application"
Note that erb is the default templating engine since it is available by default in Ruby.
Now let us extend our report definition to specify a template to use!
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
template :my_custom_template
end
This will look in app/views/reports/ for a template named "my_custom_template.html.erb" by default.
If you specify :engine => :haml then it will look for "my_custom_template.html.haml"
If you happen to have your report templates in a different location you can specify this as follows:
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
template :my_custom_template
views "app/views/admin/reports/"
end
And DynamicReports will look for the specified template in app/views/reports as well as app/views/admin/reports.
It is also worth pointing out that you can have as many dynamic reports in a view as you wish, simply include
each report render where desired within the view.
Charts can be defined on a report easily. Let's say we wish to chart the total versus the item quantity sold for our Orders Report exmaple:
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
chart :total_vs_quantity do
columns :total, :quantity
label_column "created_at"
end
end
This will render a *line* chart by default displaying the columns total and quantity.
Chart types may be specified easily:
type :bar
Available chart types are:
* :line (default)
* :bar
* :pie
Since DynamicReport's charts utilize the Google Chart API, you can easily extend each chart by passing a hash of chart options as part
of the block. The options are appended onto the request to the API so they should follow the Google's API commands (http://code.google.com/apis/chart/)
For example, to add min, max and average labels to the example chart, you would do something like this:
chart :total_vs_quantity, {:chxt => "r", :chxl => "0:|min|average|max"} do
columns :total, :quantity
label_column "created_at"
end
Dynamic Reports supports linking from any column within your table. To add a link to a column, add the following
to a report definition:
link :column, url
For example:
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
link :total, '/report/daily_sales'
end
You can also pass parameters to the URL based on values from the underlying model. To pass a parameter, surround the
field name with {}. The parameter does NOT need to be a displayed, column. For example, you might want to pass
an external link an ID column but not display this column on the table.
For example:
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
link :total, '/report/item_sales?id={id}' # => Will substitute ID for the value of ID associated with that record
end
Dynamic Reports supports the display of a sub-report within any report. This is accomplished using the jQuery library
available at http://www.jquery.com.
Sub-reports are created using the same definition format that you would use to create a standard report. The only
difference is that it is displayed INLINE when an associated link is clicked.
A sub-report is defined using the same format as a LINK above, but is labeled as:
subreport :column, url
For example, if you wanted to show all sales and allow a user to click on a specific item to see all historic sales
inline for just that item, you would do the following:
IN CONTROLLER:
def orders
@orders = Order.find(:all, :limit => 25)
render :text => OrdersReport.on(@orders).to_html, :layout => "application"
end
def item_sales
@item_orders = Order.find_by_id(params[:id])
render :text => ItemSales.on(@orders).to_html, :layout => "application"
end
REPORT DEFINITIONS
class OrdersReport < DynamicReports::Report
title "Orders Report"
subtitle "All orders recorded in database"
columns :total, :created_at
subreport :total, '/report/item_sales?id={id}' # => Will substitute ID for the value of ID associated with that record
end
class ItemSales < DynamicReports::Report
columns :item, :price, :created_at
end
Subreports can also be nested.
The gem includes a stylesheet and javascript based on jQuery. To add both to your Rails project,
simply type "drsetup" from the project root. This will add:
public/stylesheets/dynamic_reports.css (controls style of dynamic reports)
public/javascripts/dynamic_reports.js (controls display of subreports)
You can then modify these files as you see fit.
Inside the initializer block in config/environment.rb
config.gem "dynamic_reports"
Then define your reports (as exampled above) in app/reports/*_report.rb
If you would like to customize the default report simply create your report templates
within app/views/reports/*_report.<content-type>.<engine>.
Two Rails features that we are currently working on are:
* generator
* render extensions
We are currently examining solutions for csv, pdf and charting.
* Fastercsv # csv
* Prawn # pdf
* flying saucer # html => PDF - if jRuby available
* amcharts # Charting, note that default is built in google charts.
These will be defined/implemented using DynamicReports plugin API (not implemented yet)
Which allows for user defined plugins of arbitrary types beyond html,csv,pdf,xml