class Flash
Ruby on Rails 8.0.4
Since v3.0.20Action Dispatch Flash
The flash provides a way to pass temporary primitive-types (String, Array, Hash) between actions. Anything you place in the flash will be exposed to the very next action and then cleared out. This is a great way of doing notices and alerts, such as a create action that sets flash[:notice] = "Post successfully created" before redirecting to a display action that can then expose the flash to its template. Actually, that exposure is automatically done.
class PostsController < ActionController::Base def create # save post flash[:notice] = "Post successfully created" redirect_to @post end def show # doesn't need to assign the flash notice to the template, that's done automatically end end
Then in show.html.erb:
<% if flash[:notice] %> <div class="notice"><%= flash[:notice] %></div> <% end %>
Since the notice and alert keys are a common idiom, convenience accessors are available:
flash.alert = "You must be logged in" flash.notice = "Post successfully created"
This example places a string in the flash. And of course, you can put as many as you like at a time too. If you want to pass non-primitive types, you will have to handle that in your application. Example: To show messages with links, you will have to use sanitize helper.
Just remember: They’ll be gone by the time the next action has been performed.
See docs on the FlashHash class for more details about the flash.
Inherits from
Namespace
Modules
Classes
Constants
Methods (defined here)
- self. new
Methods (inherited)
From Object (17)
- # acts_like?
- # blank?
- # deep_dup
- # duplicable?
- # html_safe?
- # in?
- # instance_values
- # instance_variable_names
- # presence
- # presence_in
- # present?
- # to_param
- # to_query
- # try
- # try!
- # with
- # with_options
From ActiveSupport::NumericWithFormat (2)
- # to_formatted_s
- # to_fs