NAME

Statocles::Help::Theme - A guide to making Statocles themes

VERSION

version 0.098

DESCRIPTION

A Theme is the "View" class of Statocles. Themes build Statocles::Template objects that apps can then attach to a page. Each template has a category and a name. The category usually maps to the application name, or "site" for global site templates. Themes get their templates from a Statocles::Store.

Default Themes

There are some default themes included with Statocles, with more on the way. To use a default theme, set your site's theme to ::name, where name is the name of the theme. The currently-available default themes are:

::default

The default theme uses the Skeleton CSS boilerplate to build a simple, clean starting point for your own theme.

::bootstrap

The bootstrap theme uses the Bootstrap library to provide an elegant and flexible theme. Sites like Bootswatch can provide a custom look to your Bootstrap site.

Making Minor Adjustments

Include Stores

Before going to editing the entire theme, you can change the theme includes by adding include_stores.

Some examples of files you can edit are:

site/head_after.html.ep

This include is after all the default <head> content. You can add links to new scripts and stylesheets here.

site/header_after.html.ep

This include is after the nav bar and page header. You can add banners and such here.

site/footer.html.ep

The entire site footer is up to you to edit.

site/sidebar_before.html.ep

If the page has a sidebar, this include will be placed before it.

Editing a Theme

Start From the Default Theme

It is unlikely that the default themes will do things exactly as you need. So, Statocles has a command to copy one of the default themes into your site directory so that you can edit it as you need.

    # Bundle the default theme
    $ statocles bundle theme default site/theme
    Theme "default" written to "site/theme"
    Make sure to update "site.yml"

This command will copy the "default" Statocles theme into the "site/theme" directory. Now we need to update our site.yml to point to our new theme:

    # site.yml
    site:
        class: Statocles::Site
        args:
            theme: site/theme

Writing a Template

The default Statocles::Theme uses Mojo::Template, the template class from Mojolicious. In the template, there are a few directives that allow you to evaluate Perl code, which is why the templates are also called ".ep" for Embedded Perl.

    # A single leading % means the rest of the line is Perl
    % if ( $self->path eq '/index.html' ) {

    # A leading %= means replace with the return value
    %= $self->path

    # Inline code can be wrapped in <% ... %>
    # <%= ... %> is replaced with the return value
    My name is <%= $self->name %>

    # Comments are %# and <%# %>
    %# This is in the template, but not the result
    <%# A comment %>

Template Variables

When an application assembles a page object, it sets values inside. The page then gives those values to the template. The common values in every template are:

$self - The current Statocles::Page object
$site - The current Statocles::Site object
$app - The current Statocles::App object

These objects hold all the data we need to render the page. Since you are writing Perl, you can use any of the methods from those objects. Some useful methods to note are:

data()

All of the objects above, Page, Site, and App, have a data() method that allows for an arbitrary hash of key/values. Site and App data are configured in the Site's config file, so these can be used as hooks for template authors to add additional features, such as social media links or metrics tools. Page objects data come from the App, and add information that may not fit anywhere else.

$self->sections

The sections method works on document pages and gives you all of the content split into sections on the section marker (---).

    # Get only the first section
    my ( $first_section ) = $self->sections;

    # Loop over the sections
    % for my $section ( $self->sections ) {
        <%= $section %>
    % }

Helpers

Helpers are extra functions available to the template.

include

The include helper allows you to include another template or file. The include will be searched for in the theme directory.

    # Include a template, passing the same variables as the current template
    %= include "site/before_header.html.ep"

    # Include a file without template processing
    %= include "site/before_header.html"

If the included path ends with ".ep", it is treated as a template. Otherwise, it's just written directly with no processing.

markdown

The markdown helper allows you to render Markdown to HTML. This is useful when you're using extra data() (see above) or for things like the blog app tag_text attribute.

    # Render Markdown as HTML
    %= markdown $self->data->{markdown}

Layouts

When a page object is built, it is given a template and a layout. The default layout is a special template called default.html.ep in the layout category that wraps the content from the template, allowing a consistent site style in a single place.

The layout generally adds the site's scaffolding: <html>, <head>, <body>, scripts and stylesheets, header and footer.

The layout gets the exact same template variables that the current page's template gets, so you have the current page ($self), current site ($site), and current app ($app), in case you need it for the layout.

Stylesheets and Scripts

A site's theme is deployed to the "/theme" path. If a theme needs extra files, like stylesheets, scripts, and images, they can be added to the theme's directory and referenced in the HTML from "/theme".

    # Reference a stylesheet in theme/css/normalize.css
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="/theme/css/normalize.css" />

SEE ALSO

Statocles::Theme
Statocles::Template

AUTHOR

Doug Bell <preaction@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Doug Bell.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.