He/Him/His
I'm a Software Engineer and a teacher.
There's no feeling quite like the one you get when you watch someone's eyes light up learning something they didn't know.
According to the documentation the second argument passed to radio_button_tag is the value of the input. Writing the tag the way you did gives me a radio button that looks like this:
should give you what you want, considering you have to have accessors for default_telephone_index on you model/form_object. (Which would be a good approach anyway, since you want as little code as possible in your view.) Also note that the radio_button is on the overall form, not the phoneNumber formbuilder.
Also, the original intent of my comment was to point you to the use of the :index option not to have to compose names yourself, but it only works on methods like radio_button on the formbuilder, not on _tag methods.
He/Him/His
I'm a Software Engineer and a teacher.
There's no feeling quite like the one you get when you watch someone's eyes light up learning something they didn't know.
I'm not seeing that.
According to the documentation the second argument passed to
radio_button_tag
is the value of the input. Writing the tag the way you did gives me a radio button that looks like this:I tried a few other variations and none gave e a properly formatted radio button.
Sorry, I was a bit quick to reply:
should give you what you want, considering you have to have accessors for
default_telephone_index
on you model/form_object. (Which would be a good approach anyway, since you want as little code as possible in your view.) Also note that the radio_button is on the overall form, not thephoneNumber
formbuilder.Also, the original intent of my comment was to point you to the use of the :index option not to have to compose names yourself, but it only works on methods like
radio_button
on the formbuilder, not on_tag
methods.At that makes more sense :)