1 package Catalyst::View::TT::XHTML;
4 use namespace::clean -except => 'meta';
6 BEGIN { # You can have chain endpoints in your view if you smoked enough crack..
7 extends qw/Catalyst::View::TT/;
8 with qw/Catalyst::View::ContentNegotiation::XHTML/;
11 our $VERSION = '1.100';
19 Catalyst::View::TT::XHTML - A sub-class of the standard TT view which serves
20 application/xhtml+xml content if the browser accepts it.
24 package MyApp::View::XHTML;
27 use base qw/Catalyst::View::TT::XHTML/;
33 This is a very simple sub-class of L<Catalyst::View::TT>, which sets the
34 response C<Content-Type> to be C<application/xhtml+xml> if the user's browser
35 sends an C<Accept> header indicating that it is willing to process that MIME
38 Changing the C<Content-Type> causes browsers to interpret the page as XML,
39 meaning that the markup must be well formed.
41 This is useful when you're developing your application, as you know that all
42 pages you view are parsed as XML, so any errors caused by your markup not
43 being well-formed will show up at once.
47 This module is a very simple demonstration of a consumer of the
48 L<Catalyst::View::ContentNegotiation::XHTML> role.
50 If your needs are not trivial, or you are not using TT, then using this view
51 is B<discouraged and deprecated>. It is highly recommended that you consume
52 the L<Catalyst::View::ContentNegotiation::XHTML> role yourself, rather than
53 doing silly things with multiple inheritance to use this view in combination
58 Original author and maintainer - Tomas Doran (t0m)
59 C<< <bobtfish@bobtfish.net> >>
61 Now mostly the work of other, smarter people - see
62 L<Catalyst::View::ContentNegotiation::XHTML>.
66 This module itself is copyright (c) 2008 Tomas Doran and is licensed under the
67 same terms as Perl itself.