package Catalyst::View::TT;
use strict;
+use warnings;
+
use base qw/Catalyst::View/;
+use Data::Dump 'dump';
use Template;
use Template::Timer;
-use NEXT;
+use MRO::Compat;
+use Scalar::Util qw/blessed weaken/;
-our $VERSION = '0.22';
+our $VERSION = '0.42';
+$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
__PACKAGE__->mk_accessors('template');
+__PACKAGE__->mk_accessors('expose_methods');
__PACKAGE__->mk_accessors('include_path');
+__PACKAGE__->mk_accessors('content_type');
*paths = \&include_path;
=head1 SYNOPSIS
-# use the helper to create View
- myapp_create.pl view TT TT
+# use the helper to create your View
-# configure in lib/MyApp.pm
+ myapp_create.pl view Web TT
- MyApp->config(
- name => 'MyApp',
- root => MyApp->path_to('root');,
- 'View::TT' => {
- # any TT configurations items go here
+# add custom configuration in View/Web.pm
+
+ __PACKAGE__->config(
+ # any TT configuration items go here
+ TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '.tt',
+ CATALYST_VAR => 'c',
+ TIMER => 0,
+ ENCODING => 'utf-8'
+ # Not set by default
+ PRE_PROCESS => 'config/main',
+ WRAPPER => 'site/wrapper',
+ render_die => 1, # Default for new apps, see render method docs
+ expose_methods => [qw/method_in_view_class/],
+ );
+
+# add include path configuration in MyApp.pm
+
+ __PACKAGE__->config(
+ 'View::Web' => {
INCLUDE_PATH => [
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'src' ),
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'lib' ),
+ __PACKAGE__->path_to( 'root', 'src' ),
+ __PACKAGE__->path_to( 'root', 'lib' ),
],
- PRE_PROCESS => 'config/main',
- WRAPPER => 'site/wrapper',
- TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '.tt',
-
- # two optional config items
- CATALYST_VAR => 'Catalyst',
- TIMER => 1,
},
);
-
-# render view from lib/MyApp.pm or lib/MyApp::C::SomeController.pm
-
+
+# render view from lib/MyApp.pm or lib/MyApp::Controller::SomeController.pm
+
sub message : Global {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->stash->{template} = 'message.tt2';
$c->stash->{message} = 'Hello World!';
- $c->forward('MyApp::V::TT');
+ $c->forward( $c->view('Web') );
}
# access variables from template
The message is: [% message %].
-
+
# example when CATALYST_VAR is set to 'Catalyst'
- Context is [% Catalyst %]
- The base is [% Catalyst.req.base %]
- The name is [% Catalyst.config.name %]
-
+ Context is [% Catalyst %]
+ The base is [% Catalyst.req.base %]
+ The name is [% Catalyst.config.name %]
+
# example when CATALYST_VAR isn't set
Context is [% c %]
The base is [% base %]
The name is [% name %]
+=cut
+
+sub _coerce_paths {
+ my ( $paths, $dlim ) = shift;
+ return () if ( !$paths );
+ return @{$paths} if ( ref $paths eq 'ARRAY' );
+
+ # tweak delim to ignore C:/
+ unless ( defined $dlim ) {
+ $dlim = ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) ? ':(?!\\/)' : ':';
+ }
+ return split( /$dlim/, $paths );
+}
+
+sub new {
+ my ( $class, $c, $arguments ) = @_;
+ my $config = {
+ EVAL_PERL => 0,
+ TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '',
+ CLASS => 'Template',
+ %{ $class->config },
+ %{$arguments},
+ };
+ if ( ! (ref $config->{INCLUDE_PATH} eq 'ARRAY') ) {
+ my $delim = $config->{DELIMITER};
+ my @include_path
+ = _coerce_paths( $config->{INCLUDE_PATH}, $delim );
+ if ( !@include_path ) {
+ my $root = $c->config->{root};
+ my $base = Path::Class::dir( $root, 'base' );
+ @include_path = ( "$root", "$base" );
+ }
+ $config->{INCLUDE_PATH} = \@include_path;
+ }
+
+ # if we're debugging and/or the TIMER option is set, then we install
+ # Template::Timer as a custom CONTEXT object, but only if we haven't
+ # already got a custom CONTEXT defined
+
+ if ( $config->{TIMER} ) {
+ if ( $config->{CONTEXT} ) {
+ $c->log->error(
+ 'Cannot use Template::Timer - a TT CONTEXT is already defined'
+ );
+ }
+ else {
+ $config->{CONTEXT} = Template::Timer->new(%$config);
+ }
+ }
+
+ if ( $c->debug && $config->{DUMP_CONFIG} ) {
+ $c->log->debug( "TT Config: ", dump($config) );
+ }
+
+ my $self = $class->next::method(
+ $c, { %$config },
+ );
+
+ # Set base include paths. Local'd in render if needed
+ $self->include_path($config->{INCLUDE_PATH});
+
+ $self->expose_methods($config->{expose_methods});
+ $self->config($config);
+
+ # Creation of template outside of call to new so that we can pass [ $self ]
+ # as INCLUDE_PATH config item, which then gets ->paths() called to get list
+ # of include paths to search for templates.
+
+ # Use a weakened copy of self so we don't have loops preventing GC from working
+ my $copy = $self;
+ Scalar::Util::weaken($copy);
+ $config->{INCLUDE_PATH} = [ sub { $copy->paths } ];
+
+ if ( $config->{PROVIDERS} ) {
+ my @providers = ();
+ if ( ref($config->{PROVIDERS}) eq 'ARRAY') {
+ foreach my $p (@{$config->{PROVIDERS}}) {
+ my $pname = $p->{name};
+ my $prov = 'Template::Provider';
+ if($pname eq '_file_')
+ {
+ $p->{args} = { %$config };
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if($pname =~ s/^\+//) {
+ $prov = $pname;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ $prov .= "::$pname";
+ }
+ # We copy the args people want from the config
+ # to the args
+ $p->{args} ||= {};
+ if ($p->{copy_config}) {
+ map { $p->{args}->{$_} = $config->{$_} }
+ grep { exists $config->{$_} }
+ @{ $p->{copy_config} };
+ }
+ }
+ local $@;
+ eval "require $prov";
+ if(!$@) {
+ push @providers, "$prov"->new($p->{args});
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ $c->log->warn("Can't load $prov, ($@)");
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ delete $config->{PROVIDERS};
+ if(@providers) {
+ $config->{LOAD_TEMPLATES} = \@providers;
+ }
+ }
+
+ $self->{template} =
+ $config->{CLASS}->new($config) || do {
+ my $error = $config->{CLASS}->error();
+ $c->log->error($error);
+ $c->error($error);
+ return undef;
+ };
+
+
+ return $self;
+}
+
+sub process {
+ my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
+
+ my $template = $c->stash->{template}
+ || $c->action . $self->config->{TEMPLATE_EXTENSION};
+
+ unless (defined $template) {
+ $c->log->debug('No template specified for rendering') if $c->debug;
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+ local $@;
+ my $output = eval { $self->render($c, $template) };
+ if (my $err = $@) {
+ return $self->_rendering_error($c, $template . ': ' . $err);
+ }
+ if (blessed($output) && $output->isa('Template::Exception')) {
+ $self->_rendering_error($c, $output);
+ }
+
+ unless ( $c->response->content_type ) {
+ my $default = $self->content_type || 'text/html; charset=UTF-8';
+ $c->response->content_type($default);
+ }
+
+ $c->response->body($output);
+
+ return 1;
+}
+
+sub _rendering_error {
+ my ($self, $c, $err) = @_;
+ my $error = qq/Couldn't render template "$err"/;
+ $c->log->error($error);
+ $c->error($error);
+ return 0;
+}
+
+sub render {
+ my ($self, $c, $template, $args) = @_;
+
+ $c->log->debug(qq/Rendering template "$template"/) if $c && $c->debug;
+
+ my $output;
+ my $vars = {
+ (ref $args eq 'HASH' ? %$args : %{ $c->stash() }),
+ $self->template_vars($c)
+ };
+
+ local $self->{include_path} =
+ [ @{ $vars->{additional_template_paths} }, @{ $self->{include_path} } ]
+ if ref $vars->{additional_template_paths};
+
+ unless ( $self->template->process( $template, $vars, \$output ) ) {
+ if (exists $self->{render_die}) {
+ die $self->template->error if $self->{render_die};
+ return $self->template->error;
+ }
+ $c->log->debug('The Catalyst::View::TT render() method will start dying on error in a future release. Unless you are calling the render() method manually, you probably want the new behaviour, so set render_die => 1 in config for ' . blessed($self) . '. If you wish to continue to return the exception rather than throwing it, add render_die => 0 to your config.') if $c && $c->debug;
+ return $self->template->error;
+ }
+ return $output;
+}
+
+sub template_vars {
+ my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
+
+ return () unless $c;
+ my $cvar = $self->config->{CATALYST_VAR};
+
+ my %vars = defined $cvar
+ ? ( $cvar => $c )
+ : (
+ c => $c,
+ base => $c->req->base,
+ name => $c->config->{name}
+ );
+
+ if ($self->expose_methods) {
+ my $meta = $self->meta;
+ foreach my $method_name (@{$self->expose_methods}) {
+ my $method = $meta->find_method_by_name( $method_name );
+ unless ($method) {
+ Catalyst::Exception->throw( "$method_name not found in TT view" );
+ }
+ my $method_body = $method->body;
+ my $weak_ctx = $c;
+ weaken $weak_ctx;
+ my $sub = sub {
+ $self->$method_body($weak_ctx, @_);
+ };
+ $vars{$method_name} = $sub;
+ }
+ }
+ return %vars;
+}
+
+1;
+
+__END__
+
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This is the Catalyst view class for the L<Template Toolkit|Template>.
Your application should defined a view class which is a subclass of
-this module. The easiest way to achieve this is using the
-F<myapp_create.pl> script (where F<myapp> should be replaced with
-whatever your application is called). This script is created as part
-of the Catalyst setup.
+this module. Throughout this manual it will be assumed that your application
+is named F<MyApp> and you are creating a TT view named F<Web>; these names
+are placeholders and should always be replaced with whatever name you've
+chosen for your application and your view. The easiest way to create a TT
+view class is through the F<myapp_create.pl> script that is created along
+with the application:
- $ script/myapp_create.pl view TT TT
+ $ script/myapp_create.pl view Web TT
-This creates a MyApp::V::TT.pm module in the F<lib> directory (again,
+This creates a F<MyApp::View::Web.pm> module in the F<lib> directory (again,
replacing C<MyApp> with the name of your application) which looks
something like this:
- package FooBar::V::TT;
-
- use strict;
- use base 'Catalyst::View::TT';
+ package FooBar::View::Web;
+ use Moose;
- __PACKAGE__->config->{DEBUG} = 'all';
+ extends 'Catalyst::View::TT';
+
+ __PACKAGE__->config(DEBUG => 'all');
Now you can modify your action handlers in the main application and/or
controllers to forward to your view class. You might choose to do this
to the TT view class.
# In MyApp or MyApp::Controller::SomeController
-
+
sub end : Private {
my( $self, $c ) = @_;
- $c->forward('MyApp::V::TT');
+ $c->forward( $c->view('Web') );
}
+But if you are using the standard auto-generated end action, you don't even need
+to do this!
+
+ # in MyApp::Controller::Root
+ sub end : ActionClass('RenderView') {} # no need to change this line
+
+ # in MyApp.pm
+ __PACKAGE__->config(
+ ...
+ default_view => 'Web',
+ );
+
+This will Just Work. And it has the advantages that:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item *
+
+If you want to use a different view for a given request, just set
+<< $c->stash->{current_view} >>. (See L<Catalyst>'s C<< $c->view >> method
+for details.
+
+=item *
+
+<< $c->res->redirect >> is handled by default. If you just forward to
+C<View::Web> in your C<end> routine, you could break this by sending additional
+content.
+
+=back
+
+See L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView> for more details.
+
=head2 CONFIGURATION
There are a three different ways to configure your view class. The
first way is to call the C<config()> method in the view subclass. This
happens when the module is first loaded.
- package MyApp::V::TT;
-
- use strict;
- use base 'Catalyst::View::TT';
+ package MyApp::View::Web;
+ use Moose;
+ extends 'Catalyst::View::TT';
- MyApp::V::TT->config({
- INCLUDE_PATH => [
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'lib' ),
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'src' ),
- ],
+ __PACKAGE__->config({
PRE_PROCESS => 'config/main',
WRAPPER => 'site/wrapper',
});
-The second way is to define a C<new()> method in your view subclass.
-This performs the configuration when the view object is created,
-shortly after being loaded. Remember to delegate to the base class
-C<new()> method (via C<$self-E<gt>NEXT::new()> in the example below) after
-performing any configuration.
+You may also override the configuration provided in the view class by adding
+a 'View::Web' section to your application config.
- sub new {
- my $self = shift;
- $self->config({
- INCLUDE_PATH => [
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'lib' ),
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'src' ),
- ],
- PRE_PROCESS => 'config/main',
- WRAPPER => 'site/wrapper',
- });
- return $self->NEXT::new(@_);
- }
-
-The final, and perhaps most direct way, is to define a class
-item in your main application configuration, again by calling the
-uniquitous C<config()> method. The items in the class hash are
-added to those already defined by the above two methods. This happens
-in the base class new() method (which is one reason why you must
-remember to call it via C<NEXT> if you redefine the C<new()> method in a
-subclass).
-
- package MyApp;
-
- use strict;
- use Catalyst;
-
- MyApp->config({
- name => 'MyApp',
- root => MyApp->path_to('root'),
- 'V::TT' => {
+This should generally be used to inject the include paths into the view to
+avoid the view trying to load the application to resolve paths.
+
+ .. inside MyApp.pm ..
+ __PACKAGE__->config(
+ 'View::Web' => {
INCLUDE_PATH => [
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'lib' ),
- MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'src' ),
+ __PACKAGE__->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'lib' ),
+ __PACKAGE__->path_to( 'root', 'templates', 'src' ),
],
- PRE_PROCESS => 'config/main',
- WRAPPER => 'site/wrapper',
},
- });
+ );
+
+You can also configure your view from within your config file if you're
+using L<Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader>. This should be reserved for
+deployment-specific concerns. For example:
+
+ # MyApp_local.conf (Config::General format)
-Note that any configuration items defined by one of the earlier
-methods will be overwritten by items of the same name provided by the
-latter methods.
+ <View Web>
+ WRAPPER "custom_wrapper"
+ INCLUDE_PATH __path_to('root/templates/custom_site')__
+ INCLUDE_PATH __path_to('root/templates')__
+ </View>
+
+might be used as part of a simple way to deploy different instances of the
+same application with different themes.
=head2 DYNAMIC INCLUDE_PATH
Sometimes it is desirable to modify INCLUDE_PATH for your templates at run time.
-
+
Additional paths can be added to the start of INCLUDE_PATH via the stash as
follows:
If you need to add paths to the end of INCLUDE_PATH, there is also an
include_path() accessor available:
- push( @{ $c->view('TT')->include_path }, qw/path/ );
+ push( @{ $c->view('Web')->include_path }, qw/path/ );
Note that if you use include_path() to add extra paths to INCLUDE_PATH, you
MUST check for duplicate paths. Without such checking, the above code will add
rather than adding to it. This eliminates both the need to perform duplicate
checking and the chance of a memory leak:
- @{ $c->view('TT')->include_path } = qw/path another_path/;
+ @{ $c->view('Web')->include_path } = qw/path another_path/;
-If you are calling C<render> directly then you can specify dynamic paths by
-having a C<additional_template_paths> key with a value of additonal directories
+If you are calling C<render> directly then you can specify dynamic paths by
+having a C<additional_template_paths> key with a value of additional directories
to search. See L<CAPTURING TEMPLATE OUTPUT> for an example showing this.
+=head2 Unicode (pre Catalyst v5.90080)
+
+B<NOTE> Starting with L<Catalyst> v5.90080 unicode and encoding has been
+baked into core, and the default encoding is UTF-8. The following advice
+is for older versions of L<Catalyst>.
+
+Be sure to set C<< ENCODING => 'utf-8' >> and use
+L<Catalyst::Plugin::Unicode::Encoding> if you want to use non-ascii
+characters (encoded as utf-8) in your templates. This is only needed if
+you actually have UTF8 literals in your templates and the BOM is not
+properly set. Setting encoding here does not magically encode your
+template output. If you are using this version of L<Catalyst> you need
+to all the Unicode plugin, or upgrade (preferred)
+
+=head2 Unicode (Catalyst v5.90080+)
+
+This version of L<Catalyst> will automatically encode your body output
+to UTF8. This means if your variables contain multibyte characters you don't
+need top do anything else to get UTF8 output. B<However> if your templates
+contain UTF8 literals (like, multibyte characters actually in the template
+text), then you do need to either set the BOM mark on the template file or
+instruct TT to decode the templates at load time via the ENCODING configuration
+setting. Most of the time you can just do:
+
+ MyApp::View::HTML->config(
+ ENCODING => 'UTF-8');
+
+and that will just take care of everything. This configuration setting will
+force L<Template> to decode all files correctly, so that when you hit
+the finalize_encoding step we can properly encode the body as UTF8. If you
+fail to do this you will get double encoding issues in your output (but again,
+only for the UTF8 literals in your actual template text.)
+
+Again, this ENCODING configuration setting only instructs template toolkit
+how (and if) to decode the contents of your template files when reading them from
+disk. It has no other effect.
+
=head2 RENDERING VIEWS
The view plugin renders the template specified in the C<template>
-item in the stash.
+item in the stash.
sub message : Global {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->stash->{template} = 'message.tt2';
- $c->forward('MyApp::V::TT');
+ $c->forward( $c->view('Web') );
}
-If a class item isn't defined, then it instead uses the
-current match, as returned by C<< $c->match >>. In the above
-example, this would be C<message>.
+If a stash item isn't defined, then it instead uses the
+stringification of the action dispatched to (as defined by $c->action)
+in the above example, this would be C<message>, but because the default
+is to append '.tt', it would load C<root/message.tt>.
The items defined in the stash are passed to the Template Toolkit for
use as template variables.
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->stash->{template} = 'message.tt2';
$c->stash->{message} = 'Hello World!';
- $c->forward('MyApp::V::TT');
+ $c->forward( $c->view('Web') );
}
A number of other template variables are also added:
sub send_email : Local {
my ($self, $c) = @_;
-
+
$c->email(
header => [
To => 'me@localhost',
Subject => 'A TT Email',
],
- body => $c->view('TT')->render($c, 'email.tt', {
+ body => $c->view('Web')->render($c, 'email.tt', {
additional_template_paths => [ $c->config->{root} . '/email_templates'],
email_tmpl_param1 => 'foo'
}
=head2 METHODS
-=over 4
-
-=item new
+=head2 new
-The constructor for the TT view. Sets up the template provider,
+The constructor for the TT view. Sets up the template provider,
and reads the application config.
-=cut
-
-sub _coerce_paths {
- my ( $paths, $dlim ) = shift;
- return () if ( !$paths );
- return @{$paths} if ( ref $paths eq 'ARRAY' );
-
- # tweak delim to ignore C:/
- unless ( defined $dlim ) {
- $dlim = ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) ? ':(?!\\/)' : ':';
- }
- return split( /$dlim/, $paths );
-}
-
-sub new {
- my ( $class, $c, $arguments ) = @_;
- my $config = {
- EVAL_PERL => 0,
- TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '',
- %{ $class->config },
- %{$arguments},
- };
- if ( ! (ref $config->{INCLUDE_PATH} eq 'ARRAY') ) {
- my $delim = $config->{DELIMITER};
- my @include_path
- = _coerce_paths( $config->{INCLUDE_PATH}, $delim );
- if ( !@include_path ) {
- my $root = $c->config->{root};
- my $base = Path::Class::dir( $root, 'base' );
- @include_path = ( "$root", "$base" );
- }
- $config->{INCLUDE_PATH} = \@include_path;
- }
-
+=head2 process($c)
+Renders the template specified in C<< $c->stash->{template} >> or
+C<< $c->action >> (the private name of the matched action). Calls L<render> to
+perform actual rendering. Output is stored in C<< $c->response->body >>.
- # if we're debugging and/or the TIMER option is set, then we install
- # Template::Timer as a custom CONTEXT object, but only if we haven't
- # already got a custom CONTEXT defined
-
- if ( $config->{TIMER} ) {
- if ( $config->{CONTEXT} ) {
- $c->log->error(
- 'Cannot use Template::Timer - a TT CONTEXT is already defined'
- );
- }
- else {
- $config->{CONTEXT} = Template::Timer->new(%$config);
- }
- }
-
- if ( $c->debug && $config->{DUMP_CONFIG} ) {
- use Data::Dumper;
- $c->log->debug( "TT Config: ", Dumper($config) );
- }
- if ( $config->{PROVIDERS} ) {
- my @providers = ();
- if ( ref($config->{PROVIDERS}) eq 'ARRAY') {
- foreach my $p (@{$config->{PROVIDERS}}) {
- my $pname = $p->{name};
- eval "require Template::Provider::$pname";
- if(!$@) {
- push @providers, "Template::Provider::${pname}"->new($p->{args});
- }
- }
- }
- delete $config->{PROVIDERS};
- if(@providers) {
- $config->{LOAD_TEMPLATES} = \@providers;
- }
- }
-
- my $self = $class->NEXT::new(
- $c, { %$config },
- );
+It is possible to forward to the process method of a TT view from inside
+Catalyst like this:
- # Set base include paths. Local'd in render if needed
- $self->include_path($config->{INCLUDE_PATH});
-
- $self->config($config);
+ $c->forward('View::Web');
- # Creation of template outside of call to new so that we can pass [ $self ]
- # as INCLUDE_PATH config item, which then gets ->paths() called to get list
- # of include paths to search for templates.
-
- $config->{INCLUDE_PATH} = [ $self ];
- $self->{template} =
- Template->new($config) || do {
- my $error = Template->error();
- $c->log->error($error);
- $c->error($error);
- return undef;
- };
+N.B. This is usually done automatically by L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView>.
+=head2 render($c, $template, \%args)
- return $self;
-}
+Renders the given template and returns output. Throws a L<Template::Exception>
+object upon error.
-=item process
+The template variables are set to C<%$args> if C<$args> is a hashref, or
+C<< $c->stash >> otherwise. In either case the variables are augmented with
+C<base> set to C<< $c->req->base >>, C<c> to C<$c>, and C<name> to
+C<< $c->config->{name} >>. Alternately, the C<CATALYST_VAR> configuration item
+can be defined to specify the name of a template variable through which the
+context reference (C<$c>) can be accessed. In this case, the C<c>, C<base>, and
+C<name> variables are omitted.
-Renders the template specified in C<< $c->stash->{template} >> or
-C<< $c->action >> (the private name of the matched action. Calls L<render> to
-perform actual rendering. Output is stored in C<< $c->response->body >>.
+C<$template> can be anything that Template::process understands how to
+process, including the name of a template file or a reference to a test string.
+See L<Template::process|Template/process> for a full list of supported formats.
-=cut
+To use the render method outside of your Catalyst app, just pass a undef context.
+This can be useful for tests, for instance.
-sub process {
- my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
+It is possible to forward to the render method of a TT view from inside Catalyst
+to render page fragments like this:
- my $template = $c->stash->{template}
- || $c->action . $self->config->{TEMPLATE_EXTENSION};
+ my $fragment = $c->forward("View::Web", "render", $template_name, $c->stash->{fragment_data});
- unless ($template) {
- $c->log->debug('No template specified for rendering') if $c->debug;
- return 0;
- }
+=head3 Backwards compatibility note
- my $output = $self->render($c, $template);
+The render method used to just return the Template::Exception object, rather
+than just throwing it. This is now deprecated and instead the render method
+will throw an exception for new applications.
- if (UNIVERSAL::isa($output, 'Template::Exception')) {
- my $error = qq/Coldn't render template "$output"/;
- $c->log->error($error);
- $c->error($error);
- return 0;
- }
+This behaviour can be activated (and is activated in the default skeleton
+configuration) by using C<< render_die => 1 >>. If you rely on the legacy
+behaviour then a warning will be issued.
- unless ( $c->response->content_type ) {
- $c->response->content_type('text/html; charset=utf-8');
- }
+To silence this warning, set C<< render_die => 0 >>, but it is recommended
+you adjust your code so that it works with C<< render_die => 1 >>.
- $c->response->body($output);
+In a future release, C<< render_die => 1 >> will become the default if
+unspecified.
- return 1;
-}
+=head2 template_vars
-=item render($c, $template, \%args)
+Returns a list of keys/values to be used as the catalyst variables in the
+template.
-Renders the given template and returns output, or a L<Template::Exception>
-object upon error.
+=head2 config
-The template variables are set to C<%$args> if $args is a hashref, or
-$C<< $c->stash >> otherwise. In either case the variables are augmented with
-C<base> set to C< << $c->req->base >>, C<c> to C<$c> and C<name> to
-C<< $c->config->{name} >>. Alternately, the C<CATALYST_VAR> configuration item
-can be defined to specify the name of a template variable through which the
-context reference (C<$c>) can be accessed. In this case, the C<c>, C<base> and
-C<name> variables are omitted.
+This method allows your view subclass to pass additional settings to
+the TT configuration hash, or to set the options as below:
-C<$template> can be anything that Template::process understands how to
-process, including the name of a template file or a reference to a test string.
-See L<Template::process|Template/process> for a full list of supported formats.
+=head2 paths
-=cut
+The list of paths TT will look for templates in.
-sub render {
- my ($self, $c, $template, $args) = @_;
+=head2 expose_methods
- $c->log->debug(qq/Rendering template "$template"/) if $c->debug;
+The list of methods in your View class which should be made available to the templates.
- my $output;
- my $vars = {
- (ref $args eq 'HASH' ? %$args : %{ $c->stash() }),
- $self->template_vars($c)
- };
+For example:
- local $self->{include_path} =
- [ @{ $vars->{additional_template_paths} }, @{ $self->{include_path} } ]
- if ref $vars->{additional_template_paths};
+ expose_methods => [qw/uri_for_css/],
- unless ($self->template->process( $template, $vars, \$output ) ) {
- return $self->template->error;
- } else {
- return $output;
- }
-}
+ ...
-=item template_vars
+ sub uri_for_css {
+ my ($self, $c, $filename) = @_;
-Returns a list of keys/values to be used as the catalyst variables in the
-template.
+ # additional complexity like checking file exists here
-=cut
+ return $c->uri_for('/static/css/' . $filename);
+ }
-sub template_vars {
- my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
+Then in the template:
- my $cvar = $self->config->{CATALYST_VAR};
+ [% uri_for_css('home.css') %]
- defined $cvar
- ? ( $cvar => $c )
- : (
- c => $c,
- base => $c->req->base,
- name => $c->config->{name}
- )
-}
+=head2 content_type
-=item config
+This lets you override the default content type for the response. If you do
+not set this and if you do not set the content type in your controllers, the
+default is C<text/html; charset=utf-8>.
-This method allows your view subclass to pass additional settings to
-the TT configuration hash, or to set the options as below:
+Use this if you are creating alternative view responses, such as text or JSON
+and want a global setting.
-=over 2
+Any content type set in your controllers before calling this view are respected
+and have priority.
-=item C<CATALYST_VAR>
+=head2 C<CATALYST_VAR>
Allows you to change the name of the Catalyst context object. If set, it will also
remove the base and name aliases, so you will have access them through <context>.
-For example:
-
- MyApp->config({
- name => 'MyApp',
- root => MyApp->path_to('root'),
- 'V::TT' => {
- CATALYST_VAR => 'Catalyst',
- },
- });
-
-F<message.tt2>:
+For example, if CATALYST_VAR has been set to "Catalyst", a template might
+contain:
The base is [% Catalyst.req.base %]
The name is [% Catalyst.config.name %]
-=item C<TIMER>
+=head2 C<TIMER>
If you have configured Catalyst for debug output, and turned on the TIMER setting,
C<Catalyst::View::TT> will enable profiling of template processing
<!-- TIMER END: process mainmenu/footer.tt (0.003016 seconds) -->
-=item C<TEMPLATE_EXTENSION>
+=head2 C<TEMPLATE_EXTENSION>
-a sufix to add when looking for templates bases on the C<match> method in L<Catalyst::Request>.
+a suffix to add when looking for templates bases on the C<match> method in L<Catalyst::Request>.
For example:
- package MyApp::C::Test;
- sub test : Local { .. }
+ package MyApp::Controller::Test;
+ sub test : Local { .. }
Would by default look for a template in <root>/test/test. If you set TEMPLATE_EXTENSION to '.tt', it will look for
<root>/test/test.tt.
-=back
+=head2 C<PROVIDERS>
-=back
+Allows you to specify the template providers that TT will use.
+
+ MyApp->config(
+ name => 'MyApp',
+ root => MyApp->path_to('root'),
+ 'View::Web' => {
+ PROVIDERS => [
+ {
+ name => 'DBI',
+ args => {
+ DBI_DSN => 'dbi:DB2:books',
+ DBI_USER=> 'foo'
+ }
+ }, {
+ name => '_file_',
+ args => {}
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ );
+
+The 'name' key should correspond to the class name of the provider you
+want to use. The _file_ name is a special case that represents the default
+TT file-based provider. By default the name is will be prefixed with
+'Template::Provider::'. You can fully qualify the name by using a unary
+plus:
+
+ name => '+MyApp::Provider::Foo'
+
+You can also specify the 'copy_config' key as an arrayref, to copy those keys
+from the general config, into the config for the provider:
+
+ DEFAULT_ENCODING => 'utf-8',
+ PROVIDERS => [
+ {
+ name => 'Encoding',
+ copy_config => [qw(DEFAULT_ENCODING INCLUDE_PATH)]
+ }
+ ]
+
+This can prove useful when you want to use the additional_template_paths hack
+in your own provider, or if you need to use Template::Provider::Encoding
+
+=head2 C<CLASS>
+
+Allows you to specify a custom class to use as the template class instead of
+L<Template>.
+
+ package MyApp::View::Web;
+ use Moose;
+ extends 'Catalyst::View::TT';
+
+ use Template::AutoFilter;
+
+ __PACKAGE__->config({
+ CLASS => 'Template::AutoFilter',
+ });
+
+This is useful if you want to use your own subclasses of L<Template>, so you
+can, for example, prevent XSS by automatically filtering all output through
+C<| html>.
=head2 HELPERS
L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TTSite> helper modules are provided to create
your view module. There are invoked by the F<myapp_create.pl> script:
- $ script/myapp_create.pl view TT TT
+ $ script/myapp_create.pl view Web TT
- $ script/myapp_create.pl view TT TTSite
+ $ script/myapp_create.pl view Web TTSite
The L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TT> module creates a basic TT view
module. The L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TTSite> module goes a little
started. It also configures the view module to locate the templates
automatically.
+=head1 NOTES
+
+If you are using the L<CGI> module inside your templates, you will
+experience that the Catalyst server appears to hang while rendering
+the web page. This is due to the debug mode of L<CGI> (which is
+waiting for input in the terminal window). Turning off the
+debug mode using the "-no_debug" option solves the
+problem, eg.:
+
+ [% USE CGI('-no_debug') %]
+
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Catalyst>, L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TT>,
Andy Wardley, C<abw@cpan.org>
+Luke Saunders, C<luke.saunders@gmail.com>
+
=head1 COPYRIGHT
-This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it
+This program is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
-
-1;