I already did it, but perhaps you can point me in a better way.

I made a class called Booking Information: https://gist.github.com/785209

Where I'll store the post parameters of my interest like this:

    @booking_info = BookingInformation.new(
                  params[:properties],
                  params[:children],
                  params[:adults],
                  params[:checkin],
                  params[:checkout],
                  params[:locale]
    )

after that I'll just redirect the user to the proper URL with
redirect_to(@booking_info.output_url)

The reason why I'm doing this is because I have a form where based on
the user input of a given property, date-range and amount of persons,
must redirect to a URL constructed with the given parameters (The code
is the gist),

That's the point of the intermediate action (More specifically based
on the property an chain and propertyID must be assigned)

On Jan 18, 5:36 pm, Frederick Cheung <[email protected]>
wrote:
> On 18 Jan 2011, at 18:52, "Got Josh?" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I would like to do that's the best way of actually accomplishing the
> > following on Rails.
>
> > I have a "Booking Form" with 5 fields (Property, Amount of Children,
> > Amount of Adults and 2 Dates - Departure and Arrival) based on these
> > fields, I need to construct an URL and redirect the user to this url.
> > Now, I have 2 questions.
>
> > 1) How i catch the POST parameters in the controller, because I'm
> > mapping the form to an action like this:
>
> They'll be in params. You might make your life slightly easier if you name 
> your parameters foo[p1], foo[p2] etc, because then all your parameters are in 
> params[:foo]. Hash#to_query turns a hash back into a query string.
>
> > <% form_tag(:action => "booking") do %>
>
> > and routing it to a controller action like this: (Pages Controller,
> > Booking Action)
>
> > match 'pages/booking' => 'pages#booking'
>
> > 2) Is this the Rails way of actually accomplishing such thing?
>
> I don't quite understand what you are doing. What's the point of the 
> intermediate action?
>
> Fred
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > I did it this way in PHP in the past, but now I have the need of
> > actually doing it in Rails, could you Rails Gurus inspire me ?
>
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