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ruby on rails - SessionsHelper in railstutorial.org: Should helpers be general-purpose modules for code not needed in views?

railstutorial.org has a suggestion which strikes me as a little odd.

It suggests this code:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base 
  protect_from_forgery 
  include SessionsHelper 
end 

The include SessionsHelper makes the methods available from ApplicationController, yes, but it makes them available in any view, as well. I understand that authentication/authorization is cross-cutting, but is this really the best place?

That seems to me to be potentially too broad of a scope. Putting code which implements, say, a before_filter which conditionally redirects (as the railstutorial.org example does) in a module which more commonly contains view helpers seems surprising.

Would functionality not strictly needed in views be better placed in ApplicationController or elsewhere?

Or am I just thinking too much about this?

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Indeed, your feeling is correct.

I would implement this the other way around: add the functions sign_in and current_user to ApplicationController (or if you really want to: in a separate module defined in lib and include it), and then make sure that the current_user method is available in the view.

In short:

class ApplicationController

  helper_method :current_user

  def sign_in

  end

  def current_user
    @current_user ||= user_from_remember_token
  end
end

Of course, if you have a lot of code to place into your ApplicationController it can get messy. In that case I would create a file libsession_management.rb:

module SessionManagement
  def self.included(base)
    base.helper_method :current_user
  end

  def sign_in
    ..
  end

  def current_user
    ..
  end
end

and inside your controller you can then just write:

class ApplicationController
  include SessionManagement
end

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