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Template::Manual::ViewUser Contributed Perl DocumentTemplate::Manual::Views(3)

NAME
       Template::Manual::Views - Template Toolkit views (experimental)

Overview
       A view is effectively a collection of templates and/or variable
       definitions which can be passed around as a self-contained unit.	 This
       then represents a particular interface or presentation style for other
       objects or items of data.

       You can use views to implement custom "skins" for an application or
       content set.  You can use them to help simplify the presentation of
       common objects or data types.  You can even use then to automate the
       presentation of complex data structures such as that generated in an
       "XML::DOM" tree or similar.  You let an iterator do the walking, and
       the view does the talking (or in this case, the presenting).  Voila -
       you have view independant, structure shy traversal using templates.

       In general, views can be used in a number of different ways to achieve
       several different things.  They elegantly solve some problems which
       were otherwise difficult or complicated, and make easy some things that
       were previously hard.

       At the moment, they're still very experimental.	The directive syntax
       and underlying API are likely to change quite considerably over the
       next version or two.  Please be very wary about building your multi-
       million dollar e-commerce solutions based around this feature.

Views as Template Collectors/Providers
       The "VIEW" directive starts a view definition and includes a name by
       which the view can be referenced.  The view definition continues up to
       the matching "END" directive.

	   [% VIEW myview %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       The first role of a view is to act as a collector and provider of
       templates.  The "include()" method can be called on a view to
       effectively do the same thing as the "INCLUDE" directive.  The template
       name is passed as the first argument, followed by any local variable
       definitions for the template.

	   [% myview.include('header', title='The Title') %]

	   # equivalent to
	   [% INCLUDE header  title='The Title' %]

       Views accept a number of configuration options which can be used to
       control different aspects of their behaviour.  The '"prefix"' and
       '"suffix"' options can be specified to add a fixed prefix and/or suffix
       to the name of each template.

	   [% VIEW myview
		prefix = 'my/'
		suffix = '.tt2' ;
	      END
	   %]

       Now the call

	   [% myview.include('header', title='The Title') %]

       is equivalent to

	   [% INCLUDE my/header.tt2  title='The Title' %]

       Views provide an "AUTOLOAD" method which maps method names to the
       "include()" method.  Thus, the following are all equivalent:

	   [% myview.include('header', title='Hello World') %]
	   [% myview.include_header(title='Hello World') %]
	   [% myview.header(title='Hello World') %]

Local BLOCK Definitions
       A "VIEW" definition can include "BLOCK" definitions which remain local
       to the view.   A request for a particular template will return a
       "BLOCK", if defined, in preference to any other template of the same
       name.

	   [% BLOCK foo %]
	      public foo block
	   [% END %]

	   [% VIEW plain %]
	      [% BLOCK foo %]
	      plain foo block
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% VIEW fancy %]
	      [% BLOCK foo %]
	      fancy foo block
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% INCLUDE foo %]	   # public foo block
	   [% plain.foo %]	   # plain foo block
	   [% fancy.foo %]	   # fancy foo block

       In addition to "BLOCK" definitions, a "VIEW" can contain any other
       template directives.  The entire "VIEW" definition block is processed
       to initialise the view but no output is generated (this may change RSN
       - and get stored as '"output"' item, subsequently accessible as "[%
       view.output %]").  However, directives that have side-effects, such as
       those that update a variable, will have noticable consequences.

Preserving Variable State within Views
       Views can also be used to save the values of any existing variables, or
       to create new ones at the point at which the view is defined.  Unlike
       simple template metadata ("META") which can only contain static string
       values, the view initialisation block can contain any template
       directives and generate any kind of dynamic output and/or data items.

	   [% VIEW my_web_site %]
	      [% view.title   = title or 'My Cool Web Site' %]
	      [% view.author  = "$abw.name, $abw.email" %]
	      [% view.sidebar = INCLUDE my/sidebar.tt2 %]
	   [% END %]

       Note that additional data items can be specified as arguments to the
       "VIEW" directive.  Anything that doesn't look like a configuration
       parameter is assumed to be a data item.	This can be a little
       hazardous, of course, because you never know when a new configuration
       item might get added which interferes with your data.

	   [% VIEW my_web_site
		   # config options
		   prefix = 'my/'
		   # misc data
		   title   = title or 'My Cool Web Site'
		   author  = "$abw.name, $abw.email"
		   sidebar = INCLUDE my/sidebar.tt2
	   %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       Outside of the view definition you can access the view variables as,
       for example:

	   [% my_web_site.title %]

       One important feature is the equivalence of simple variables and
       templates.  You can implement the view item '"title"' as a simple
       variable, a template defined in an external file, possibly with a
       prefix/suffix automatically appended, or as a local "BLOCK" definition
       within the "[% VIEW %] ... [% END %]" definition.  If you use the
       syntax above then the view will Do The Right Thing to return the
       appropriate output.

       At the "END" of the "VIEW" definition the view is "sealed" to prevent
       you from accidentally updating any variable values.  If you attempt to
       change the value of a variable after the "END" of the "VIEW" definition
       block then a "view" error will be thrown.

	   [% TRY;
		my_web_site.title = 'New Title';
	      CATCH;
		error;
	      END
	   %]

       The error above will be reported as:

	   view error - cannot update item in sealed view: title

       The same is true if you pass a parameter to a view variable.  This is
       interpreted as an attempt to update the variable and will raise the
       same warning.

	   [% my_web_site.title('New Title') %]	   # view error!

       You can set the "silent" parameter to have the view ignore these
       parameters and simply return the variable value.

	   [% VIEW my_web_site
		   silent = 1
		   title  = title or 'My Cool Web Site'
		   # ... ;
	      END
	   %]

	   [% my_web_site.title('Blah Blah') %]	  # My Cool Web Site

       Alternately, you can specify that a view is unsealed allowing existing
       variables to be updated and new variables defined.

	   [% VIEW my_web_site
		   sealed = 0
		   title  = title or 'My Cool Web Site'
		   # ... ;
	      END
	   %]

	   [% my_web_site.title('Blah Blah') %]	  # Blah Blah
	   [% my_web_site.title %]		  # Blah Blah

   Inheritance, Delegation and Reuse
       Views can be inherited from previously defined views by use of the
       "base" parameter.  This example shows how a base class view is defined
       which applies a "view/default/" prefix to all template names.

	   [% VIEW my.view.default
		   prefix = 'view/default/';
	      END
	   %]

       Thus the directive:

	   [% my.view.default.header(title='Hello World') %]

       is now equivalent to:

	   [% INCLUDE view/default/header title='Hello World' %]

       A second view can be defined which specifies the default view as a
       base.

	   [% VIEW my.view.fancy
		   base	  = my.view.default
		   prefix = 'view/fancy/';
	      END
	   %]

       Now the directive:

	   [% my.view.fancy.header(title='Hello World') %]

       will resolve to:

	   [% INCLUDE view/fancy/header title='Hello World' %]

       or if that doesn't exist, it will be handled by the base view as:

	   [% INCLUDE view/default/header title='Hello World' %]

       When a parent view is specified via the "base" parameter, the
       delegation of a view to its parent for fetching templates and accessing
       user defined variables is automatic.  You can also implement your own
       inheritance, delegation or other reuse patterns by explicitly
       delegating to other views.

	   [% BLOCK foo %]
	      public foo block
	   [% END %]

	   [% VIEW plain %]
	      [% BLOCK foo %]
	      <plain>[% PROCESS foo %]</plain>
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% VIEW fancy %]
	      [% BLOCK foo %]
	      [% plain.foo | replace('plain', 'fancy') %]
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% plain.foo %]     # <plain>public foo block</plain>
	   [% fancy.foo %]     # <fancy>public foo block</fancy>

       Note that the regular "INCLUDE/PROCESS/WRAPPER" directives work
       entirely independantly of views and will always get the original,
       unaltered template name rather than any local per-view definition.

   Self-Reference
       A reference to the view object under definition is available with the
       "VIEW ... END" block by its specified name and also by the special name
       '"view"' (similar to the "my $self = shift;" in a Perl method or the
       '"this"' pointer in C++, etc).  The view is initially unsealed allowing
       any data items to be defined and updated within the "VIEW ... END"
       block.  The view is automatically sealed at the end of the definition
       block, preventing any view data from being subsequently changed.

       (NOTE: sealing should be optional.  As well as sealing a view to
       prevent updates ("SEALED"), it should be possible to set an option in
       the view to allow external contexts to update existing variables
       ("UPDATE") or even create totally new view variables ("CREATE")).

	   [% VIEW fancy %]
	      [% fancy.title  = 'My Fancy Title' %]
	      [% fancy.author = 'Frank Open' %]
	      [% fancy.col    = { bg => '#ffffff', bar => '#a0a0ff' } %]
	   [% END %]

       or

	   [% VIEW fancy %]
	      [% view.title  = 'My Fancy Title' %]
	      [% view.author = 'Frank Open' %]
	      [% view.col    = { bg => '#ffffff', bar => '#a0a0ff' } %]
	   [% END %]

       It makes no real difference in this case if you refer to the view by
       its name, '"fancy"', or by the general name, '"view"'.  Outside of the
       view block, however, you should always use the given name, '"fancy"':

	   [% fancy.title  %]
	   [% fancy.author %]
	   [% fancy.col.bg %]

       The choice of given name or '"view"' is much more important when it
       comes to "BLOCK" definitions within a "VIEW".  It is generally
       recommended that you use '"view"' inside a "VIEW" definition because
       this is guaranteed to be correctly defined at any point in the future
       when the block gets called.  The original name of the view might have
       long since been changed or reused but the self-reference via '"view"'
       should always be intact and valid.

       Take the following VIEW as an example:

	   [% VIEW foo %]
	      [% view.title = 'Hello World' %]
	      [% BLOCK header %]
	      Title: [% view.title %]
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

       Even if we rename the view, or create a new "foo" variable, the header
       block still correctly accesses the "title" attribute of the view to
       which it belongs.  Whenever a view "BLOCK" is processed, the "view"
       variable is always updated to contain the correct reference to the view
       object to which it belongs.

	   [% bar = foo %]
	   [% foo = { title => "New Foo" } %]  # no problem
	   [% bar.header %]		       # => Title: Hello World

   Saving References to External Views
       When it comes to view inheritance, it's always a good idea to take a
       local copy of a parent or delegate view and store it as an attribute
       within the view for later use.  This ensures that the correct view
       reference is always available, even if the external name of a view has
       been changed.

	   [% VIEW plain %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

	   [% VIEW fancy %]
	      [% view.plain = plain %]
	      [% BLOCK foo %]
	      [% view.plain.foo | replace('plain', 'fancy') %]
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% plain.foo %]	   # => <plain>public foo block</plain>
	   [% plain = 'blah' %]	   # no problem
	   [% fancy.foo %]	   # => <fancy>public foo block</fancy>

   Views as Data Presenters
       Another key role of a view is to act as a dispatcher to automatically
       apply the correct template to present a particular object or data item.
       This is handled via the "print()" method.

       Here's an example:

	   [% VIEW foo %]

	      [% BLOCK text %]
		 Some text: [% item %]
	      [% END %]

	      [% BLOCK hash %]
		 a hash:
		 [% FOREACH key = item.keys.sort -%]
		    [% key %] => [% item.$key %]
		 [% END -%]
	      [% END %]

	      [% BLOCK list %]
		 a list: [% item.sort.join(', ') %]
	      [% END %]

	   [% END %]

       We can now use the view to print text, hashes or lists.	The "print()"
       method includes the right template depending on the typing of the
       argument (or arguments) passed.

	   [% some_text = 'I read the news today, oh boy.' %]
	   [% a_hash	= { house => 'Lords', hall => 'Albert' } %]
	   [% a_list	= [ 'sure', 'Nobody', 'really' ] %]

	   [% view.print(some_text) %]
			       # Some text: I read the news today, oh boy.

	   [% view.print(a_hash) %]
			       # a hash:
				    hall => Albert
				    house => Lords
	   [% view.print(a_list) %]
			       # a list: Nobody, really, sure

       You can also provide templates to print objects of any other class.
       The class name is mapped to a template name with all non-word character
       sequences such as '"::"' converted to a single '"_"'.

	   [% VIEW foo %]
	      [% BLOCK Foo_Bar %]
		 a Foo::Bar object:
		     thingies: [% view.print(item.thingies) %]
		      doodahs: [% view.print(item.doodahs)  %]
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% USE fubar = Foo::Bar(...) %]

	   [% foo.print(fubar) %]

       Note how we use the view object to display various items within the
       objects ('"thingies"' and '"doodahs"').	We don't need to worry what
       kind of data these represent (text, list, hash, etc) because we can let
       the view worry about it, automatically mapping the data type to the
       correct template.

       Views may define their own type => template map.

	   [% VIEW foo
		map = { TEXT  => 'plain_text',
			ARRAY => 'show_list',
			HASH  => 'show_hash',
			My::Module => 'template_name'
			default	   => 'any_old_data'
		      }
	   %]
	       [% BLOCK plain_text %]
		  ...
	       [% END %]

	       ...
	   [% END %]

       They can also provide a "default" map entry, specified as part of the
       "map" hash or as a parameter by itself.

	   [% VIEW foo
		map	= { ... },
		default = 'whatever'
	   %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       or

	   [% VIEW foo %]
	      [% view.map     = { ... }
		 view.default = 'whatever'
	      %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       The "print()" method provides one more piece of magic. If you pass it a
       reference to an object which provides a "present()" method, then the
       method will be called passing the view as an argument. This then gives
       any object a chance to determine how it should be presented via the
       view.

	   package Foo::Bar;
	   ...
	   sub present {
	       my ($self, $view) = @_;
	       return "a Foo::Bar object:\n"
		    . "thingies: " . $view->print($self->{ _THINGIES }) . "\n"
		    . "doodahs: " . $view->print($self->{ _DOODAHS }) . "\n";
	   }

       The object is free to delve deeply into its innards and mess around
       with its own private data, before presenting the relevant data via the
       view.  In a more complex example, a "present()" method might walk part
       of a tree making calls back against the view to present different nodes
       within the tree.	 We may not want to expose the internal structure of
       the tree (because that would break encapsulation and make our
       presentation code dependant on it) but we want to have some way of
       walking the tree and presenting items found in a particular manner.

       This is known as Structure Shy Traversal.  Our view object doesn't
       require prior knowledge about the internal structure of any data set to
       be able to traverse it and present the data contained therein.  The
       data items themselves, via the "present()" method, can implement the
       internal iterators to guide the view along the right path to
       presentation happiness.

       The upshot is that you can use views to greatly simplify the display of
       data structures like "XML::DOM" trees.  The documentation for the
       "Template::Plugin::XML::DOM" module contains an example of this.	 In
       essence, it looks something like this:

       XML source:

	   <user name="Andy Wardley">
	       <project id="iCan" title="iCan, but theyCan't"/>
	       <project id="p45"  title="iDid, but theyDidn't"/>
	   </user>

       TT View:

	   [% VIEW fancy %]
	      [% BLOCK user %]
		 User: [% item.name %]
		       [% item.content(myview) %]
	      [% END %]

	      [% BLOCK project %]
		   Project: [% project.id %] - [% project.name %]
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

       Generate view:

	   [% USE dom = XML.DOM %]
	   [% fancy.print(dom.parse(xml_source)) %]

       Output:

		 User: Andy Wardley
		   Project: iCan - iCan, but theyCan't
		   Project: p45 - iDid, but theyDidn't

       The same approach can be applied to many other areas.  Here's an
       example from the "File"/"Directory" plugins.

	   [% VIEW myview %]
	      [% BLOCK file %]
		 - [% item.name %]
	      [% END %]

	      [% BLOCK directory %]
		 * [% item.name %]
		   [% item.content(myview) FILTER indent %]
	      [% END %]
	   [% END %]

	   [% USE dir = Directory(dirpath) %]
	   [% myview.print(dir) %]

       And here's the same approach use to convert POD documentation to any
       other format via template.

	   [%  # load Pod plugin and parse source file into Pod Object Model
	       USE Pod;
	       pom = Pod.parse_file(my_pod_file);

	       # define view to map all Pod elements to "pod/html/xxx" templates
	       VIEW pod2html
		   prefix='pod/html';
	       END;

	       # now print document via view (i.e. as HTML)
	       pod2html.print(pom)
	   %]

       Here we simply define a template prefix for the view which causes the
       view to look for "pod/html/head1", "pod/html/head2", "pod/html/over" as
       templates to present the different sections of the parsed Pod document.

       There are some examples in the Template Toolkit test suite: t/pod.t and
       t/view.t which may shed some more light on this.	 See the distribution
       sub-directory examples/pod/html for examples of Pod -> HTML templates.

perl v5.14.3			  2011-12-20	    Template::Manual::Views(3)
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