20 Scaffolding - Reference Documentation
Authors: Graeme Rocher, Peter Ledbrook, Marc Palmer, Jeff Brown, Luke Daley, Burt Beckwith, Lari Hotari
Version: 2.5.1
20 Scaffolding
Scaffolding lets you generate some basic CRUD interfaces for a domain class, including:- The necessary views
- Controller actions for create/read/update/delete (CRUD) operations
BuildConfig.groovy
file:plugins {
…
compile ":scaffolding:2.0.0"
…
}
Dynamic Scaffolding
The simplest way to get started with scaffolding is to enable it with thescaffold
property. Set the scaffold
property in the controller to true
for the Book
domain class:class BookController { static scaffold = true }
BookController
follows the same naming convention as the Book
domain class. To scaffold a specific domain class we could reference the class directly in the scaffold property:class SomeController {
static scaffold = Author
}
- index
- show
- edit
- delete
- create
- save
- update
http://localhost:8080/app/book
in a browser.If you prefer to keep your domain model in Java and mapped with Hibernate you can still use scaffolding, simply import the domain class and set its name as the scaffold
argument.You can add new actions to a scaffolded controller, for example:class BookController { static scaffold = Book def changeAuthor() { def b = Book.get(params.id) b.author = Author.get(params["author.id"]) b.save() // redirect to a scaffolded action redirect(action:show) } }
class BookController { static scaffold = Book // overrides scaffolded action to return both authors and books def index() { [bookInstanceList: Book.list(), bookInstanceTotal: Book.count(), authorInstanceList: Author.list()] } def show() { def book = Book.get(params.id) log.error(book) [bookInstance : book] } }
By default, the size of text areas in scaffolded views is defined in the CSS, so adding 'rows' and 'cols' attributes will have no effect.Also, the standard scaffold views expect model variables of the form<propertyName>InstanceList
for collections and<propertyName>Instance
for single instances. It's tempting to use properties like 'books' and 'book', but those won't work.
Customizing the Generated Views
The views adapt to Validation constraints. For example you can change the order that fields appear in the views simply by re-ordering the constraints in the builder:def constraints = { title() releaseDate() }
inList
constraint:def constraints = { title() category(inList: ["Fiction", "Non-fiction", "Biography"]) releaseDate() }
range
constraint on a number:def constraints = { age(range:18..65) }
def constraints = { name(size:0..30) }
Static Scaffolding
Grails also supports "static" scaffolding.The above scaffolding features are useful but in real world situations it's likely that you will want to customize the logic and views. Grails lets you generate a controller and the views used to create the above interface from the command line. To generate a controller type:grails generate-controller Book
grails generate-views Book
grails generate-all Book
grails generate-all com.bookstore.Book