lexxy-variables
Insert and safely resolve variables in Lexxy
rich text. The gem gives you an editor button (and a {{` prompt) for inserting variables into your text. Each variable is stored as an [Action Text attachment](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/action_text_overview.html#rendering-attachments) — an `<action-text-attachment>` chip with its own content type — not as literal `{{ var_name }} markup. At render time the gem resolves each chip to its value.
You decide what variables exist and what they turn into.
Because variables are just Action Text attachments, you can register new
chip types with register_attachment (see Full configuration):
a :value chip resolves to an escaped string, a :fragment chip splices rich
content in before sanitization.
Liquid is optional. The default renderer is plain, injection-safe string substitution and pulls in no template engine.
Requirements
Ruby 3.2+, Rails 8.0+, and a JavaScript bundler (esbuild, vite, or webpack). See the note on importmap in Install.
Install
Ruby:
# Gemfile
gem "lexxy-variables"
JavaScript. The editor extension is distributed as an npm package, so you need a bundler (esbuild, vite, webpack). Install it alongside Lexxy:
yarn add lexxy-variables @37signals/lexxy
Then register the extension in your JavaScript entrypoint:
import VariableExtension from "lexxy-variables"
import * as Lexxy from "@37signals/lexxy"
Lexxy.configure({ global: { extensions: [ VariableExtension ] } })
The extension imports a few primitives from lexical, and Lexical is very
sensitive to running as a single instance. If your bundle ends up with two
copies of lexical (a common one: your app pulls a newer lexical than the
version Lexxy bundles), commands dispatched from one instance won't see nodes
from the other and inserts fail silently. If you hit that, pin lexical to the
version Lexxy bundles so everything dedupes to one copy:
# match the lexical Lexxy depends on (0.44.x for Lexxy 0.9.22)
yarn add lexical@0.44.0
importmap is not supported yet. The extension needs
lexicaland@37signals/lexxyresolved to the same instance Lexxy runs, which importmap can't currently guarantee. The gem still ships the vendored JS and pins so it works the moment Lexxy exposes Lexical to extensions upstream (basecamp/lexxy#1047). Until then, use a bundler.
Minimal configuration
catalog is the list users pick from in the editor. assigns is the lookup that
turns a key into a value at render time. catalog is required; assigns is
optional. Leave it out and the gem reads value straight off the catalog item.
Put the configure block in an initializer, e.g. config/initializers/lexxy_variables.rb:
LexxyVariables.configure do |c|
c.catalog = [ { key: "company", name: "Company", value: "Acme" } ]
end
The gem adds two view helpers, one for each side of the workflow: one to author content and one to display it.
On the editor page (the form where content is composed), render the prompt
inside the Lexxy editor. The editor extension looks for the <lexxy-prompt>
within the <lexxy-editor> element, so it must be nested in the rich_text_area
block — that is what feeds the {{ popup and the toolbar dropdown:
<%= form_with model: @record do |form| %>
<%= form.rich_text_area :body do %>
<%= lexxy_variables_prompt %>
<% end %>
<%= form.submit %>
<% end %>
Typing {{ opens the prompt shown above; there's also a toolbar dropdown for
picking from the same list. Inserted variables appear as chips in the editor:
On the display page (where the saved content is shown to readers), resolve the stored rich text. This is what swaps each variable chip for its value:
<%= render_lexxy_content(@record.body) %>
Each chip resolves to its value, so the reader sees finished text:
@record and :body are placeholders — use whatever model and Action Text
attribute hold your content.
Full configuration
context is yours to define. The gem passes it untouched to your catalog,
assigns, and resolve callables, so put whatever they need in it. That might be a
tenant, nil, or any object.
LexxyVariables.configure do |c|
# The menu users pick from. A list, a zero-arg lambda, or a ->(context) lambda.
c.catalog = ->(context) { context.variables + BuiltinVariable.all }
# The lookup. Gets only the keys used in the content being rendered and returns
# a { key => value } hash. ->(used_keys) also works if you don't need context.
c.assigns = ->(context, used_keys) { MyResolver.assigns(context, used_keys) }
# Opt into Liquid for dotted access / drops / filters.
c.renderer = LexxyVariables::Renderers::Liquid.new
# How the catalog is ordered in the prompt and dropdown. Defaults to :name
# (case-insensitive alphabetical). Use :key to sort by key, false to keep the
# catalog's given order, or a lambda: a ->(item) sort key or a ->(a, b) comparator.
c.sort = :name
# Register an extra attachment type. :fragment splices rich HTML pre-sanitize
# (e.g. snippets) and its inner :value chips resolve in the same pass.
c.(
content_type: "application/vnd.actiontext.snippet",
phase: :fragment,
label: "Snippet", # shown as a badge in the prompt when the list mixes types
resolve: ->(node, context) { MySnippets.content_for(node, context) }
)
end
Multi-tenancy
Tenancy is optional. If your app is multi-tenant, pass the tenant through as
context. With acts_as_tenant that
looks like:
LexxyVariables.configure do |c|
c.catalog = ->(tenant) { tenant.variables }
end
Both view helpers take the same context:. Pass the tenant on the editor page:
<%= form.rich_text_area :body do %>
<%= lexxy_variables_prompt(context: ActsAsTenant.current_tenant) %>
<% end %>
and again on the display page:
<%= render_lexxy_content(@record.body, context: ActsAsTenant.current_tenant) %>
Or skip context entirely and rely on acts_as_tenant scoping queries to the
current tenant for you:
LexxyVariables.configure do |c|
c.catalog = -> { Variable.all } # already scoped to ActsAsTenant.current_tenant
c.assigns = ->(keys) { Variable.where(key: keys).pluck(:key, :value).to_h }
end
Styling
The gem ships a default stylesheet so the editor UI works out of the box. Import it and override the CSS custom properties (or the classes) to match your app.
/* bundlers (esbuild, vite): */
@import "lexxy-variables/styles";
# importmap / asset-pipeline hosts: the engine adds the vendored CSS to the asset
# paths. Link or @import "lexxy_variables.css".
Classes the gem emits: .lexxy-variable (token chip), .lexxy-variable--block
(chips that expand to a block, e.g. snippets), .lexxy-variables-menu /
.lexxy-variables-menu__item (the toolbar dropdown), and .lexxy-variables-option
/ __header / __name / __type / __code (option content, shared by the
{{ prompt popup and the dropdown).
Override without touching the classes:
:root {
--lexxy-variable-background: #fef3c7;
--lexxy-variable-color: #92400e;
--lexxy-variable-block-border: 1px dashed #f59e0b;
--lexxy-variables-menu-item-hover-background: #f4f4f5;
--lexxy-variables-option-code-color: #a1a1aa;
--lexxy-variables-option-type-background: #f4f4f5;
--lexxy-variables-option-type-color: #71717a;
--lexxy-variables-prompt-max-width: 24rem; /* widen the {{ prompt popup (Lexxy caps at 20ch) */
}
Your prompt items should use the option classes so they appear the same in the popup and the dropdown:
<template type="menu">
<span class="lexxy-variables-option">
<span class="lexxy-variables-option__name"><%= variable.name %></span>
<code class="lexxy-variables-option__code">{{ <%= variable.key %> }}</code>
</span>
</template>
Security model
- Every render gets a fresh random nonce that guards the placeholder tokens, so an author can't fake a substitution by typing the token pattern into the body.
- Chips are swapped for those nonce tokens before the HTML is sanitized, and the
real values go in afterward. A
:valueresolves to HTML-escaped text that can't do anything, while a:fragmentis spliced in before sanitizing so the sanitizer still scrubs it. - Only the Liquid renderer deals with template-engine braces (
{{ }}and{% %}). The default renderer runs no engine at all, so there's nothing there to inject into.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome. To get set up:
bundle install
bundle exec rake test # run the test suite
bundle exec rubocop # lint
The editor extension in src/ is compiled into vendor/ (the copy importmap
apps load). If you change anything under src/, rebuild before committing or CI
will fail:
npm install
npm run build
CI runs the tests across Ruby 3.2–4.0, rubocop, and a check that vendor/
matches src/.