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Kasper Timm Hansen authored
Collections can take advantage of `multi_read` if they render one template and their partials begin with a cache call. The cache call must correspond to either what the collections elements are rendered as, or match the inferred name of the partial. So with a notifications/_notification.html.erb template like: ```ruby <% cache notification %> <%# ... %> <% end %> ``` A collection would be able to use `multi_read` if rendered like: ```ruby <%= render @notifications %> <%= render partial: 'notifications/notification', collection: @notifications, as: :notification %> ```
Kasper Timm Hansen authoredCollections can take advantage of `multi_read` if they render one template and their partials begin with a cache call. The cache call must correspond to either what the collections elements are rendered as, or match the inferred name of the partial. So with a notifications/_notification.html.erb template like: ```ruby <% cache notification %> <%# ... %> <% end %> ``` A collection would be able to use `multi_read` if rendered like: ```ruby <%= render @notifications %> <%= render partial: 'notifications/notification', collection: @notifications, as: :notification %> ```
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