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Nikola Đuza
Nikola Đuza

Posted on • Originally published at pragmaticpineapple.com on

Reloading Rails Partials on Demand with render_async

The new version of render_async is out, and one of the most requested features is out with it as well! Read on to find out about the novelties in the new 2.1.8 version of the gem.

Niagara Falls

Photo by Vishwesh Jirgale on Unsplash

A quick overview of the recent changes:

That’s it, let’s jump into details of each change below.

👂 Psst! We have a render_async Discord server. Join us there.

Refresh Rails partials on demand

As you might already know, render_async loads partials asynchronously after your page has loaded. Loading of partials in an async way is excellent and helpful, but the gem users wanted more power and control. After so many different requests for this, we implemented the feature to manually refresh the already loaded partial on the page without reloading the whole page.

You can do this easily by dispatching an event with a “refresh” name to the render_async HTML container. Let’s show this on an example where we load comments in a partial:

<%= render_async comments_path,
                 container_id: 'refresh-me',
                 replace_container: false %>

<button id="refresh-button">Refresh comments</button>

<script>
  var button = document.getElementById('refresh-button')
  var container = document.getElementById('refresh-me');

  button.addEventListener('click', function() {
    var event = new Event('refresh');
    // Dispatch 'refresh' on the render_async container
    container.dispatchEvent(event)
  })
</script>
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Now, the render_async will load comments on page load. But, if the user wants to reload the comments section, she can click the “Refresh comments” button. The button will then emit the “refresh” event to the render_async’s container.

One thing to note is that you need to pass in the replace_container: false. Passing this option will save the original render_async HTML element so you can dispatch the “refresh” event on it. To find out how you can enable this globally, so you only write it in one place, see the configuration options.

Working on this feature and solving so many people’s problems with this was amazing. I hope you find it useful in your routine.

Start polling immediately when the toggle is used

We added a new feature to the existing combination of features. Just in case you weren’t aware, you can do HTML polling with render_async. On top of that, we added a feature where you can start and stop polling on demand. This is doing a great service to users, but some of the users wanted to start polling immediately as the page loads, not to wait for the user to trigger polling.

Luckily, we added a feature that allows you to specify to start polling on page load:

<a href='#' id='comments-button'>Toggle comments loading</a>
<%= render_async comments_path,
                 toggle: { selector: '#comments-button',
                           event: :click,
                           start: true },
                 interval: 2000 %>
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The code above should render the “Toggle comments loading” button, and start polling as soon as the page is rendered. This is all possible by adding thestart: true option to the toggle hash.

DRY up the code with new configuration options

Finally, some new configuration options landed in the latest 2.1.8 version. So, what is new? If you needed to set nonce: true with render_async, you could now do this globally. Also, if you are about to use our new feature with refreshing partials, you will benefit from setting replace_container: falsein one place.

You can do this in your initializers or wherever you find comfortable by doing:

RenderAsync.configure do |config|
  config.nonces = true # setting it to true, all render_asnyc javascript_tag elements receive nonce: true
  config.replace_container = false # setting it to false, the original render_asnyc container is kept
end
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To figure out why you would need replace_container: false, please read the first section of this blog post about refreshing Rails partials.

If it is your first time hearing about this, we also have other configuration options in the docs.

Fix start and stop events

There were problems with event listeners for async-start and async-stopevents. Those events served to control polling through events. Since those event listeners were set up as soon as the render_async JavaScript code got evaluated, they didn’t get registered if you put content_for :render_asyncin the head of your pages.

In the new version, we made sure these event listeners registered after the page has fully loaded. If you have this problem, you can safely put backcontent_for in the head, and everything should work fine.

Final thoughts

Do not forget to star 🌟 the project and share it with your friends and coworkers if you find it useful.

Releasing a new version, polishing the README, and working on new features was a blast! Thanks to everyone that helped and keep doing the great work on contributing. Please join the Discord if you are using this gem. That way, we can make it even better!

P.S. 💸 If you like my work on this gem so far, and you want to give me some juice and motivation to keep improving and maintaining it, consider sponsoring me on GitHub Sponsors or through PayPal.

Also, feel free to share this on Twitter with friends and coworkers below:

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