Rails Designer
Posted on July 1, 2024
This article was originally published on Rails Designer
This article about forms inside forms triggered a question from a reader: when to use link_to and button_to in Rails? So I wanted to publish this short and quick article.
Rails has had both helpers from the very early beginnings. link_to
likely from the first release, and button_to
not much later.
With the release of Rails' ujs, link_to
could now accept data-attributes as seen in these older docs. This made many Rails developers belief this the right way to do it, but: you should use link_to
for simple navigation and GET
requests, and button_to
for actions that submit data or require additional security, such as POST
, PUT,
or DELETE
requests.
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I've seen some nasty HTML-element abuse in pure JavaScript apps too. Something like this:
<div onClick="doClick()">Click me</div>
(that's like using a spoon to cut your steak—technically possible, but awkwardly ineffective and a nightmare for accessibility!)
-
link_to
generates an anchor tag (<a>
):link_to "Profile", profile_path(@user), class: "link"
; -
button_to
generates a form with a single button:button_to "Delete Account", account_path(@user), method: :delete, form: { data: { turbo_confirm: "Are you sure?" } }
.
button_to
should also, for better accessibility and semantic correctness, be used to open modal or slide-overs. I could present a counterpoint if the modal or slide-over could also be opened as a separate page.
Also when you replace an element with say, an inline-form, a button_to
is the correct choice.
It's as simple as that really. Is it GET
request and does it change the URL? Go for a link_to
. Otherwise choose button_to
.
Posted on July 1, 2024
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