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impress/app/models/alt_style.rb
Emi Matchu a385a5b962 Better ordering for NC Styles in the outfit editor
Previously, when opening the pose picker and looking at Styles, the
Cybunny options were sorted like this:

- Default
- Celebratory 25th Anniversary
- Festive Christmas
- Nostalgic Baby
- Nostalgic Blue
- Nostalgic Christmas
- Nostalgic Darigan
- Nostalgic Faerie
- Nostalgic Grey
- Nostalgic Maraquan
- Nostalgic Mutant
- Nostalgic Plushie
- Nostalgic Robot
- Nostalgic Royalboy
- Nostalgic Royalgirl
- Nostalgic Snow
- Nostalgic Tyrannian
- Prismatic Cocoa: Festive Christmas
- Prismatic Cocoa: Nostalgic Christmas
- Prismatic Tinsel: Festive Christmas
- Prismatic Tinsel: Nostalgic Christmas
- Spooky Halloween

Now, they're sorted like this:

- Default
- Celebratory 25th Anniversary
- Nostalgic Baby
- Nostalgic Blue
- Festive Christmas
- Prismatic Cocoa: Festive Christmas
- Prismatic Tinsel: Festive Christmas
- Nostalgic Christmas
- Prismatic Cocoa: Nostalgic Christmas
- Prismatic Tinsel: Nostalgic Christmas
- Nostalgic Darigan
- Nostalgic Faerie
- Nostalgic Grey
- Spooky Halloween
- Nostalgic Maraquan
- Nostalgic Mutant
- Nostalgic Plushie
- Nostalgic Robot
- Nostalgic Royalboy
- Nostalgic Royalgirl
- Nostalgic Snow
- Nostalgic Tyrannian

Note especially the Christmas case, which is all together now! I think
it's also more in line with people's expectations for Halloween to be
alphabetically among the rest, instead of being at the bottom for being
"Spooky".

There's enough styles now that I'm starting to wonder if there's other
UI affordances worth having here, like e.g. only showing (or at least
prioritizing) styles that match the chosen color? But I don't want to
mislead people about compatibility, either.
2025-01-12 11:58:37 -08:00

146 lines
4.9 KiB
Ruby

require "addressable/template"
class AltStyle < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :species
belongs_to :color
has_many :parent_swf_asset_relationships, as: :parent, dependent: :destroy
has_many :swf_assets, through: :parent_swf_asset_relationships
has_many :contributions, as: :contributed, inverse_of: :contributed
validates :body_id, presence: true
validates :series_name, presence: true, allow_nil: true
validates :thumbnail_url, presence: true
before_validation :infer_thumbnail_url, unless: :thumbnail_url?
scope :matching_name, ->(series_name, color_name, species_name) {
color = Color.find_by_name!(color_name)
species = Species.find_by_name!(species_name)
where(series_name:, color_id: color.id, species_id: species.id)
}
scope :by_creation_date, -> {
# HACK: Setting up named time zones in MySQL takes effort, so we assume
# it's not Daylight Savings. This will produce slightly incorrect
# sorting when it *is* Daylight Savings, and records happen to be
# created around midnight.
order(Arel.sql("DATE(CONVERT_TZ(created_at, '+00:00', '-08:00')) DESC"))
}
scope :by_series_main_name, -> {
# The main part of the series name, like "Nostalgic".
order(Arel.sql("SUBSTRING_INDEX(series_name, ': ', -1)"))
}
scope :by_series_variant_name, -> {
# The variant part of the series name, like "Prismatic Cyan".
order(Arel.sql("SUBSTRING_INDEX(series_name, ': ', 1)"))
}
scope :by_color_name, -> {
joins(:color).order(Color.arel_table[:name])
}
scope :by_name_grouped, -> {
# Sort by the color name, then the main part of the series name, then the
# variant part of the series name. This way, all the, say, Christmas colors
# and their Prismatic variants will be together, including both Festive and
# Nostalgic cases.
by_color_name.by_series_main_name.by_series_variant_name
}
scope :unlabeled, -> { where(series_name: nil) }
scope :newest, -> { order(created_at: :desc) }
def pet_name
I18n.translate('pet_types.human_name', color_human_name: color.human_name,
species_human_name: species.human_name)
end
alias_method :name, :pet_name
# If the series_name hasn't yet been set manually by support staff, show the
# string "<New?>" instead. But it won't be searchable by that string—that is,
# `fits:<New?>-faerie-draik` intentionally will not work, and the canonical
# filter name will be `fits:alt-style-IDNUMBER`, instead.
def series_name
real_series_name || AltStyle.placeholder_name
end
def real_series_name=(new_series_name)
self[:series_name] = new_series_name
end
def real_series_name
self[:series_name]
end
# You can use this to check whether `series_name` is returning the actual
# value or its placeholder value.
def real_series_name?
real_series_name.present?
end
def adjective_name
"#{series_name} #{color.human_name}"
end
def full_name
"#{series_name} #{name}"
end
EMPTY_IMAGE_URL = "data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw=="
def preview_image_url
# Use the image URL for the first asset. Or, fall back to an empty image.
swf_assets.first&.image_url || EMPTY_IMAGE_URL
end
# Given a list of items, return how they look on this alt style.
def appearances_for(items, ...)
Item.appearances_for(items, self, ...)
end
# At time of writing, most batches of Alt Styles thumbnails used a simple
# pattern for the item thumbnail URL, but that's not always the case anymore.
# For now, let's keep using this format as the default value when creating a
# new Alt Style, but the database field can be manually overridden as needed!
THUMBNAIL_URL_TEMPLATE = Addressable::Template.new(
"https://images.neopets.com/items/{series}_{color}_{species}.gif"
)
DEFAULT_THUMBNAIL_URL = "https://images.neopets.com/items/mall_bg_circle.gif"
def infer_thumbnail_url
if real_series_name?
self.thumbnail_url = THUMBNAIL_URL_TEMPLATE.expand(
series: series_name.gsub(/\s+/, '').downcase,
color: color.name.gsub(/\s+/, '').downcase,
species: species.name.gsub(/\s+/, '').downcase,
).to_s
else
self.thumbnail_url = DEFAULT_THUMBNAIL_URL
end
end
def real_thumbnail_url?
thumbnail_url != DEFAULT_THUMBNAIL_URL
end
def self.placeholder_name
"<New?>"
end
def self.all_series_names
distinct.where.not(series_name: nil).
by_series_main_name.by_series_variant_name.
pluck(:series_name)
end
def self.all_supported_colors
Color.find(distinct.pluck(:color_id))
end
def self.all_supported_species
Species.find(distinct.pluck(:species_id))
end
# For convenience in the console!
def self.find_by_name(color_name, species_name)
color = Color.find_by_name(color_name)
species = Species.find_by_name(species_name)
where(color_id: color, species_id: species).first
end
end