Ruby on Rails Saturday, July 30, 2011

On Jul 30, 4:17 pm, jdkealy <jdke...@gmail.com> wrote:
> when i try this without quotes, all my javascript breaks.
>

probably worth looking at what's wrong then.

Fred
> On Jul 30, 10:47 am, Frederick Cheung <frederick.che...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Jul 30, 3:57 am,jdkealy<jdke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > A date looks like Fri Jul 29 2011 22:54:08 GMT-0400 (EDT)
>
> > > When i select from my events table i run:
> > > @member_calendars = Member::Calendar.find_by_sql("SELECT * from
> > > calendars")
> > > @json_calendar = ActiveSupport::JSON.encode(@member_calendars)
>
> > > How can i get my dates into a format that works for this json object?
>
> > Looks like that calendar plugin would be happy with iso8601 dates,
> > which is what rails should generate by default when encoding dates as
> > json
>
> > > Also, how would i pull my json object into the view so i can play with
> > > it in javascript.
>
> > > The following code treats my json object as a string:
>
> > >               var foo = '<%= @json_calendar %>';
>
> > You asked for it to be a string - you've enclosed it in quotes
>
> > Fred
>
> > >                 $.each(foo, function(i, item) {
> > >                         alert(i);
> > >                 });
>
> > > It will alert each and every character from my object

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