Our Blog
Creating a Mephisto Theme using Liquid
10 October 2007 20:51, Posted by JonMephisto is an excellent blogging platform written in Ruby on Rails by Rick Olsen and Justin Palmer both of whom are behind the excellent Lighthouse Issue Tracking Software . This article / tutorial takes you step by step through the process of creating a custom theme / templates.
To an extent I am going to assume you are already familiar with Ruby and the Rails Web Development Framework, but where possible I hope to keep things as simple as possible.
First of all one of the best ways to go about learning how to create a custom template / theme is to download one of the existing themes you like from the Mephisto Themes Gallery and look inside the .zip file and see how these template authors have gone about implementing their themes.
Live Validation – Custom Validator
6 September 2007 21:51, Posted by JonFollowing my article earlier today on Live Validation, I have had a response from Alec regarding how to create a custom validator to use with his Live Validation framework.
Having asked if a custom Validator could be passed in the .Now() function Alec had the following to say:
In regards to passing a custom validation method into the .now method, it will not \’91create\’92 the validation method as such, but will accept one you have made, as long as your custom validation method takes a value as the first argument, and throws a Validate.Error exception when it fails (in order to pass on the failure message made easier by using Validate.fail), and true if it passes. For example:
- Validate.Example = function(value, paramsObj)\{
- // the following sets up default options and overides them with those passed in
- var params = Object.extend(\{
- failureMessage: “Default failre message goes in here!“
- \}, paramsObj || \{\});
- // here you would check the value you wish to validate (the one passed in), against some expected value
- // if it fails then use the Validate.fail method will throw an exception containing the failure message
- if(value != ‘My expected value‘) Validate.fail(params.failureMessage);
- // if the script reaches this far then no exception has been thrown, so the validation passed
- return true;
- \}
Alec clarified: “…if you take a look at some of the included validation methods they contain calls to some of the other ones internally, as they will throw exceptions and halt proceedings if they fail, so act in much the same way as the simple one we have above. Validate.Email is a simple example of this and can be easily adapted to make a reusable postcode format validation for instance.”
Following Alec’s example above, you can easily then use the validator using the following:
- Validate.now(Validate.Example(), value_to_validate, \{options\})
Using a custom validator opens up many possibilities such as making an AJAX call to the server to check the uniqueness of a username or password.
For more information:
Documentation for Validate.now()
Live Validation – Cross Platform, Rails style validation on the client.
6 September 2007 19:00, Posted by JonI came across a great new validation library the other day which I wanted to share with you all. Live Validation by Alec Hill is a cross-platform client-side JavaScript validation framework which provides real-time feedback to the user as they type.
Let the migration begin…
3 September 2007 11:51, Posted by JonWith my new focus on Rails, I have decided to move my blog to the excellent Mephisto Blog, from now on I will also be focusing my articles a little more towards not only Ruby on Rails but also Web Development, Web Design, UI Design and Javascript.
I have also used this opportunity to streamline the design of the site, there were a few things that didn’t work quite as they should on the old site and will have been improved along with a revamp of the colour scheme.
As I write this www.miletbaker.com still points to the old blog until all the content has been migrated and I have configured Apache to relay requests to my old urls to their new location. Once this is complete that will also be migrated across.
Also look out for the Jive (Javascript Input Validation Engine) for Prototype which I am currently working on with George which will feature real time inline validation as well as validation calls via Ajax and a Rails plug in. Check out Live Validation.

