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Adding tagging support

As our blog will contain more posts, it will become more and more difficult to retrieve them. To help classify posts by subjects we will add tagging support.

The Tag model object

We will add one more object to the blog model definition. The Tag class itself is indeed very simple:

package models;
 
import java.util.*;
import javax.persistence.*;
 
import play.db.jpa.*;
 
@Entity
public class Tag extends Model implements Comparable<Tag> {
 
    public String name;
    
    private Tag(String name) {
        this.name = name;
    }
    
    public String toString() {
        return name;
    }
    
    public int compareTo(Tag otherTag) {
        return name.compareTo(otherTag.name);
    }
 
}

Because we want something like lazy tags creation we will always get them using the findOrCreateByName(String name) factory method. Let’s add it to the Tag class:

public static Tag findOrCreateByName(String name) {
    Tag tag = Tag.find("byName", name).first();
    if(tag == null) {
        tag = new Tag(name);
    }
    return tag;
}

Tagging posts

Now it’s time to link the new Tag model with the Post one. Let’s add the correct relationship to the Post class:

...
@ManyToMany(cascade=CascadeType.PERSIST)
public Set<Tag> tags;
    
public Post(User author, String title, String content) { 
    this.comments = new ArrayList<Comment>();
    this.tags = new TreeSet<Tag>();
    this.author = author;
    this.title = title;
    this.content = content;
    this.postedAt = new Date();
}
...

Note that we use a TreeSet here in order to keep the tag list in a predictible order (alphabetical order in fact, because of our previous compareTo implementation).

We will keep this relationship unidirectional.

We will also add a bunch of helper methods to make tag management simpler. First one, the ability to tag a Post:

...
public Post tagItWith(String name) {
    tags.add(Tag.findOrCreateByName(name));
    return this;
}
...

Then the ability to retrieve all posts tagged with a specific tag:

...
public static List<Post> findTaggedWith(String tag) {
    return Post.find(
        "select distinct p from Post p join p.tags as t where t.name = ?", tag
    ).fetch();
}
...

It is time to write a new test case to test this stuff. Restart the server in test mode by typing:

$ play test

And add a new @Test to the BasicTest class:

@Test
public void testTags() {
    // Create a new user and save it
    User bob = new User("[email protected]", "secret", "Bob").save();
 
    // Create a new post
    Post bobPost = new Post(bob, "My first post", "Hello world").save();
    Post anotherBobPost = new Post(bob, "Hop", "Hello world").save();
    
    // Well
    assertEquals(0, Post.findTaggedWith("Red").size());
    
    // Tag it now
    bobPost.tagItWith("Red").tagItWith("Blue").save();
    anotherBobPost.tagItWith("Red").tagItWith("Green").save();
    
    // Check
    assertEquals(2, Post.findTaggedWith("Red").size());        
    assertEquals(1, Post.findTaggedWith("Blue").size());
    assertEquals(1, Post.findTaggedWith("Green").size());
    
}

Make sure that it works.

A little more difficult now

Well, we won’t use it in our blog right now, but what if we wanted to retrieve posts tagged with several tags? It’s more difficult than it seems.

I give you the needed JPQL query because you will likely use it in several web projects:

...
public static List<Post> findTaggedWith(String... tags) {
    return Post.find(
        "select distinct p.id from Post p join p.tags as t where t.name in (:tags) group by p.id having count(t.id) = :size"
    ).bind("tags", tags).bind("size", tags.length).fetch();
}
...

The tricky part is that we have to use a having count statement to filter only posts that have exactly all tags from the joined view.

Note that we can’t use the Post.find(“...”, tags, tags.count) signature here. It’s just because tags is already a vararg.

You can test it by adding more checks to the previous test:

...
assertEquals(1, Post.findTaggedWith("Red", "Blue").size());   
assertEquals(1, Post.findTaggedWith("Red", "Green").size());   
assertEquals(0, Post.findTaggedWith("Red", "Green", "Blue").size());  
assertEquals(0, Post.findTaggedWith("Green", "Blue").size());
...

The tag cloud

Where we have tags, we need a tag cloud. Let’s add a method to the Tag class to generate the tag cloud:

public static List<Map> getCloud() {
    List<Map> result = Tag.find(
        "select new map(t.name as tag, count(p.id) as pound) from Post p join p.tags as t group by t.name"
    ).fetch();
    return result;
}

Here we use a handy feature of hibernate that allows to return a custom object from a JPA query. It will result a List containing for each tag a Map with two attributes: name for the tag name and pound for the tag count.

Let’s test it by adding one more check to our tags test:

...
List<Map> cloud = Tag.getCloud();
assertEquals(
    "[{tag=Red, pound=2}, {tag=Blue, pound=1}, {tag=Green, pound=1}]", 
    cloud.toString()
);

Adding tags to the Blog UI

We can now use the new tagging stuff to add one more way to browse the blog. As always to work efficiently we need to add a bunch of test tags to our initial data set.

Modify the /yabe/conf/initial-data.yml file to add some tags to the tests posts. For example:

... 
Tag(play):
    name:           Play
 
Tag(architecture):
    name:           Architecture
 
Tag(test):
    name:           Test
 
Tag(mvc):
    name:           MVC    
...

And then add them to posts declaration as is:

...
Post(jeffPost):
    title:          The MVC application
    postedAt:       2009-06-06
    author:         jeff
    tags:           
                    - play
                    - architecture
                    - mvc
    content:        >
                    A Play
...

You need to restart your application to force loading the new initial data set. Note how play tells you problems even in YAML files:

Then modify the #{display /} tag to show the tag set on the full post view. Edit the /yabe/app/views/tags/display/html file:

...
#{if _as != 'full'}
    <span class="post-comments">
        &nbsp;|&nbsp; ${_post.comments.size() ?: 'no'} 
        comment${_post.comments.size().pluralize()}
        #{if _post.comments}
            , latest by ${_post.comments[0].author}
        #{/if}
    </span>
#{/if}
#{elseif _post.tags}
    <span class="post-tags">
        - Tagged 
        #{list items:_post.tags, as:'tag'}
            <a href="#">${tag}</a>${tag_isLast ? '' : ', '}
        #{/list}
    </span>
#{/elseif}
...

The new ‘tagged with’ page

Now we can add a new way to list blog posts by tags. Above we left the link blank, we will replace it by a link to the new listTagged action:

...
- Tagged 
#{list items:_post.tags, as:'tag'}
    <a href="@{Application.listTagged(tag.name)}">${tag}</a>${tag_isLast ? '' : ', '}
#{/list}
...

And create the action method on the Application controller:

...
public static void listTagged(String tag) {
    List<Post> posts = Post.findTaggedWith(tag);
    render(tag, posts);
}
...

As always we create a specific route to keep clean URI:

GET     /posts/{tag}                    Application.listTagged

Well, we have a problem because we have an existing route that conflicts with this new one. These two routes will match the same URI:

GET     /posts/{id}                     Application.show
GET     /posts/{tag}                    Application.tagged

But because we’ll assume that id are numeric and tag are not, we can easily solve the situation using a regular expression to restrict the first route:

GET     /posts/{<[0-9]+>id}             Application.show
GET     /posts/{tag}                    Application.tagged 

Finally we just have to create the /yabe/app/views/Application/listTagged.html template that will be used by the new listTagged action:

#{extends 'main.html' /}
#{set title:'Posts tagged with ' + tag /}
 
*{********* Title ********* }*
 
#{if posts.size() > 1}
   <h3>There are ${posts.size()} posts tagged '${tag}'</h3>  
#{/if} 
#{elseif posts}
    <h3>There is 1 post tagged '${tag}'</h3>  
#{/elseif}
#{else}
    <h3>No post tagged '${tag}'</h3>
#{/else}
 
*{********* Posts list *********}*
 
<div class="older-posts">    
    #{list items:posts, as:'post'}
        #{display post:post, as:'teaser' /}
    #{/list}
</div> 

Go to the next part.