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Template::Plugin::FiltUser)Contributed Perl DocumenTemplate::Plugin::Filter(3)

NAME
       Template::Plugin::Filter - Base class for plugin filters

SYNOPSIS
	   package MyOrg::Template::Plugin::MyFilter;

	   use Template::Plugin::Filter;
	   use base qw( Template::Plugin::Filter );

	   sub filter {
	       my ($self, $text) = @_;

	       # ...mungify $text...

	       return $text;
	   }

	   # now load it...
	   [% USE MyFilter %]

	   # ...and use the returned object as a filter
	   [% FILTER $MyFilter %]
	     ...
	   [% END %]

DESCRIPTION
       This module implements a base class for plugin filters.	It hides the
       underlying complexity involved in creating and using filters that get
       defined and made available by loading a plugin.

       To use the module, simply create your own plugin module that is
       inherited from the "Template::Plugin::Filter" class.

	   package MyOrg::Template::Plugin::MyFilter;

	   use Template::Plugin::Filter;
	   use base qw( Template::Plugin::Filter );

       Then simply define your "filter()" method.  When called, you get passed
       a reference to your plugin object ($self) and the text to be filtered.

	   sub filter {
	       my ($self, $text) = @_;

	       # ...mungify $text...

	       return $text;
	   }

       To use your custom plugin, you have to make sure that the Template
       Toolkit knows about your plugin namespace.

	   my $tt2 = Template->new({
	       PLUGIN_BASE => 'MyOrg::Template::Plugin',
	   });

       Or for individual plugins you can do it like this:

	   my $tt2 = Template->new({
	       PLUGINS => {
		   MyFilter => 'MyOrg::Template::Plugin::MyFilter',
	       },
	   });

       Then you "USE" your plugin in the normal way.

	   [% USE MyFilter %]

       The object returned is stored in the variable of the same name,
       '"MyFilter"'.  When you come to use it as a "FILTER", you should add a
       dollar prefix.  This indicates that you want to use the filter stored
       in the variable '"MyFilter"' rather than the filter named '"MyFilter"',
       which is an entirely different thing (see later for information on
       defining filters by name).

	   [% FILTER $MyFilter %]
	      ...text to be filtered...
	   [% END %]

       You can, of course, assign it to a different variable.

	   [% USE blat = MyFilter %]

	   [% FILTER $blat %]
	      ...text to be filtered...
	   [% END %]

       Any configuration parameters passed to the plugin constructor from the
       "USE" directive are stored internally in the object for inspection by
       the "filter()" method (or indeed any other method).  Positional
       arguments are stored as a reference to a list in the "_ARGS" item while
       named configuration parameters are stored as a reference to a hash
       array in the "_CONFIG" item.

       For example, loading a plugin as shown here:

	   [% USE blat = MyFilter 'foo' 'bar' baz = 'blam' %]

       would allow the "filter()" method to do something like this:

	   sub filter {
	       my ($self, $text) = @_;

	       my $args = $self->{ _ARGS   };  # [ 'foo', 'bar' ]
	       my $conf = $self->{ _CONFIG };  # { baz => 'blam' }

	       # ...munge $text...

	       return $text;
	   }

       By default, plugins derived from this module will create static
       filters.	 A static filter is created once when the plugin gets loaded
       via the "USE" directive and re-used for all subsequent "FILTER"
       operations.  That means that any argument specified with the "FILTER"
       directive are ignored.

       Dynamic filters, on the other hand, are re-created each time they are
       used by a "FILTER" directive.  This allows them to act on any
       parameters passed from the "FILTER" directive and modify their
       behaviour accordingly.

       There are two ways to create a dynamic filter.  The first is to define
       a $DYNAMIC class variable set to a true value.

	   package MyOrg::Template::Plugin::MyFilter;
	   use base 'Template::Plugin::Filter';
	   our $DYNAMIC = 1;

       The other way is to set the internal "_DYNAMIC" value within the
       "init()" method which gets called by the "new()" constructor.

	   sub init {
	       my $self = shift;
	       $self->{ _DYNAMIC } = 1;
	       return $self;
	   }

       When this is set to a true value, the plugin will automatically create
       a dynamic filter.  The outcome is that the "filter()" method will now
       also get passed a reference to an array of postional arguments and a
       reference to a hash array of named parameters.

       So, using a plugin filter like this:

	   [% FILTER $blat 'foo' 'bar' baz = 'blam' %]

       would allow the "filter()" method to work like this:

	   sub filter {
	       my ($self, $text, $args, $conf) = @_;

	       # $args = [ 'foo', 'bar' ]
	       # $conf = { baz => 'blam' }
	   }

       In this case can pass parameters to both the USE and FILTER directives,
       so your filter() method should probably take that into account.

	   [% USE MyFilter 'foo' wiz => 'waz' %]

	   [% FILTER $MyFilter 'bar' biz => 'baz' %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       You can use the "merge_args()" and "merge_config()" methods to do a
       quick and easy job of merging the local (e.g. "FILTER") parameters with
       the internal (e.g. "USE") values and returning new sets of
       conglomerated data.

	   sub filter {
	       my ($self, $text, $args, $conf) = @_;

	       $args = $self->merge_args($args);
	       $conf = $self->merge_config($conf);

	       # $args = [ 'foo', 'bar' ]
	       # $conf = { wiz => 'waz', biz => 'baz' }
	       ...
	   }

       You can also have your plugin install itself as a named filter by
       calling the "install_filter()" method from the "init()" method.	You
       should provide a name for the filter, something that you might like to
       make a configuration option.

	   sub init {
	       my $self = shift;
	       my $name = $self->{ _CONFIG }->{ name } || 'myfilter';
	       $self->install_filter($name);
	       return $self;
	   }

       This allows the plugin filter to be used as follows:

	   [% USE MyFilter %]

	   [% FILTER myfilter %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       or

	   [% USE MyFilter name = 'swipe' %]

	   [% FILTER swipe %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

       Alternately, you can allow a filter name to be specified as the first
       positional argument.

	   sub init {
	       my $self = shift;
	       my $name = $self->{ _ARGS }->[0] || 'myfilter';
	       $self->install_filter($name);
	       return $self;
	   }

	   [% USE MyFilter 'swipe' %]

	   [% FILTER swipe %]
	      ...
	   [% END %]

EXAMPLE
       Here's a complete example of a plugin filter module.

	   package My::Template::Plugin::Change;
	   use Template::Plugin::Filter;
	   use base qw( Template::Plugin::Filter );

	   sub init {
	       my $self = shift;

	       $self->{ _DYNAMIC } = 1;

	       # first arg can specify filter name
	       $self->install_filter($self->{ _ARGS }->[0] || 'change');

	       return $self;
	   }

	   sub filter {
	       my ($self, $text, $args, $config) = @_;

	       $config = $self->merge_config($config);
	       my $regex = join('|', keys %$config);

	       $text =~ s/($regex)/$config->{ $1 }/ge;

	       return $text;
	   }

	   1;

AUTHOR
       Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org> <http://wardley.org/>

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 1996-2007 Andy Wardley.  All Rights Reserved.

       This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO
       Template::Plugin, Template::Filters, Template::Manual::Filters

perl v5.14.3			  2012-01-24	   Template::Plugin::Filter(3)
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