Template::Declare::Tags - Build and install XML Tag subroutines for Template::Declare
package MyApp::Templates; use base 'Template::Declare'; use Template::Declare::Tags 'HTML'; template main => sub { link {} table { row { cell { "Hello, world!" } } } img { attr { src => 'cat.gif' } } img { src is 'dog.gif' } };
Produces:
<link /> <table> <tr> <td>Hello, world!</td> </tr> </table> <img src="cat.gif" /> <img src="dog.gif" />
Using XUL templates with a namespace:
package MyApp::Templates; use base 'Template::Declare'; use Template::Declare::Tags 'XUL', HTML => { namespace => 'html' }; template main => sub { groupbox { caption { attr { label => 'Colors' } } html::div { html::p { 'howdy!' } } html::br {} } };
<groupbox> <caption label="Colors" /> <html:div> <html:p>howdy!</html:p> </html:div> <html:br></html:br> </groupbox>
Template::Declare::Tags is used to generate templates and install subroutines for tag sets into the calling namespace.
Template::Declare::Tags
You can specify the tag sets to install by providing a list of tag modules in the use statement:
use
use Template::Declare::Tags qw/ HTML XUL /;
By default, Template::Declare::Tags uses the tag set provided by Template::Declare::TagSet::HTML. So
use Template::Declare::Tags;
is equivalent to
use Template::Declare::Tags 'HTML';
Currently Template::Declare bundles the following tag sets: Template::Declare::TagSet::HTML, Template::Declare::TagSet::XUL, Template::Declare::TagSet::RDF, and Template::Declare::TagSet::RDF::EM.
You can specify your own tag set classes, as long as they subclass Template::Declare::TagSet and implement the corresponding methods (e.g. get_tag_list).
get_tag_list
If you implement a custom tag set module named Template::Declare::TagSet::Foo, you can load it into a template module like so:
Template::Declare::TagSet::Foo
use Template::Declare::Tags 'Foo';
If your tag set module is not under the Template::Declare::TagSet namespace, use the from option to load it. Fore example, if you created a tag set named MyTag::Foo, then you could load it like so:
from
MyTag::Foo
use Template::Declare::Tags Foo => { from => 'MyTag::Foo' };
XML namespaces are emulated by Perl packages. For example, to embed HTML tags within XUL using the html namespace:
html
This will output:
Behind the scenes, Template::Declare::Tags generates a Perl package named html and installs the HTML tag subroutines into that package. On the other hand, XUL tag subroutines are installed into the current package, namely, MyApp::Templates in the previous example.
MyApp::Templates
There may be cases when you want to specify a different Perl package for a particular XML namespace. For instance, if the html Perl package has already been used for other purposes in your application and you don't want to install subs there and mess things up, use the package option to install them elsewhere:
package
package MyApp::Templates; use base 'Template::Declare'; use Template::Declare::Tags 'XUL', HTML => { namespace => 'htm', package => 'MyHtml' }; template main => sub { groupbox { caption { attr { label => 'Colors' } } MyHtml::div { MyHtml::p { 'howdy!' } } MyHtml::br {} } };
This code will generate something like the following:
<groupbox> <caption label="Colors" /> <htm:div> <htm:p>howdy!</htm:p> </htm:div> <htm:br></htm:br> </groupbox>
template select_list => sub { my $self = shift; select { option { $_ } for @_; } };
Declares a template in the current package. The first argument to the template subroutine will always be a Template::Declare object. Subsequent arguments will be all those passed to show(). For example, to use the above example to output a select list of colors, you'd call it like so:
Template::Declare
show()
Template::Declare->show('select_list', qw(red yellow green purple));
You can use any URL-legal characters in the template name; Template::Declare will encode the template as a Perl subroutine and stash it where show() can find it.
(Did you know that you can have characters like ":" and "/" in your Perl subroutine names? The easy way to get at them is with can).
can
private template select_list => sub { my $self = shift; select { option { $_ } for @_; } };
Declares that a template isn't available to be called directly from client code. The resulting template can instead only be called from the package in which it's created.
show( main => { user => 'Bob' } );
Displays templates. The first argument is the name of the template to be displayed. Any additional arguments will be passed directly to the template.
show can either be called with a template name or a package/object and a template. (It's both functional and OO.)
show
If called from within a Template::Declare subclass, then private templates are accessible and visible. If called from something that isn't a Template::Declare, only public templates will be visible.
From the outside world, users can either call Template::Declare->show(), show() exported from Template::Declare::Tags or Template::Declare::Tags::show() directly to render a publicly visible template.
Template::Declare->show()
Template::Declare::Tags::show()
Private templates may only be called from within the Template::Declare package.
show_page( main => { user => 'Bob' } );
Like show(), but does not dispatch to private templates. It's used internally by show() when when that method is called from outside a template class.
attr { src => 'logo.png' };
Specifies attributes for the element tag in which it appears. For example, to add a class and ID to an HTML paragraph:
p { attr { class => 'greeting text', id => 'welcome', }; 'This is a welcoming paragraph'; }
Attributes can also be specified by using is, as in
is
p { class is 'greeting text'; id is 'welcome'; 'This is a welcoming paragraph'; }
A few tricks work for 'is':
http_equiv is 'foo'; # => http-equiv="foo" xml__lang is 'foo'; # => xml:lang="foo"
So double underscore replaced with colon and single underscore with dash.
with ( id => 'greeting', class => 'foo' ), p { 'Hello, World wide web' };
An alternative way to specify attributes for a tag, just for variation. The standard way to do the same as this example using attr is:
attr
p { attr { id => 'greeting', class => 'foo' } 'Hello, World wide web' };
p { outs 'Grettings & welcome pyoonie hyoomon.' }
HTML-encodes its arguments and appends them to Template::Declare's output buffer. This is similar to simply returning a string from a tag function call, but is occasionally useful when you need to output a mix of things, as in:
p { outs 'hello'; em { 'world' } }
p { outs_raw "That's what <em>I'm</em> talking about!' }
Appends its arguments to Template::Declare's output buffer without HTML escaping.
install_tag video => 'Template::Declare::TagSet::HTML';
Sets up TAGNAME as a tag that can be used in user templates. TAGSET is an instance of a subclass for Template::Declare::TagSet.
# create a tag that has access to the arguments set with L</with>. sub sample_smart_tag (&) { my $code = shift; smart_tag_wrapper { my %args = @_; # set using 'with' outs( 'keys: ' . join( ', ', sort keys %args) . "\n" ); $code->(); }; } # use it with ( foo => 'bar', baz => 'bundy' ), sample_smart_tag { outs( "Hello, World!\n" ); };
The output would be
keys: baz, foo Hello, World!
The smart tag wrapper allows you to create code that has access to the attribute arguments specified via with. It passes those arguments in to the wrapped code in @_. It also takes care of putting the output in the right place and tidying up after itself. This might be useful to change the behavior of a template based on attributes passed to with.
with
@_
create_wrapper basics => sub { my $code = shift; html { head { title { 'Welcome' } }; body { $code->() } } };
create_wrapper declares a wrapper subroutine that can be called like a tag sub, but can optionally take arguments to be passed to the wrapper sub. For example, if you wanted to wrap all of the output of a template in the usual HTML headers and footers, you can do something like this:
create_wrapper
package MyApp::Templates; use Template::Declare::Tags; use base 'Template::Declare'; BEGIN { create_wrapper wrap => sub { my $code = shift; my %params = @_; html { head { title { outs "Hello, $params{user}!"} }; body { $code->(); div { outs 'This is the end, my friend' }; }; } }; } template inner => sub { wrap { h1 { outs "Hello, Jesse, s'up?" }; } user => 'Jesse'; };
Note how the wrap wrapper function is available for calling after it has been declared in a BEGIN block. Also note how you can pass arguments to the function after the closing brace (you don't need a comma there!).
wrap
BEGIN
The output from the "inner" template will look something like this:
<html> <head> <title>Hello, Jesse!</title> </head> <body> <h1>Hello, Jesse, s'up?</h1> <div>This is the end, my friend</div> </body> </html>
xml_decl { 'xml', version => '1.0' };
Emits an XML declaration. For example:
xml_decl { 'xml', version => '1.0' }; xml_decl { 'xml-stylesheet', href => "chrome://global/skin/", type => "text/css" };
<?xml version="1.0"?> <?xml-stylesheet href="chrome://global/skin/" type="text/css"?>
my $path = current_template();
Returns the absolute path of the current template
my $path = current_base_path();
Returns the absolute base path of the current template
under is a helper function providing semantic sugar for the mix method of Template::Declare.
under
mix
setting is a helper function providing semantic sugar for the mix method of Template::Declare.
setting
@Template::Declare::Tags::EXPORT
Holds the names of the static subroutines exported by this class. Tag subroutines generated by tag sets, however, are not included here.
@Template::Declare::Tags::TAG_SUB_LIST
Contains the names of the tag subroutines generated from a tag set.
Note that this array won't get cleared automatically before another use Template::Decalre::Tags statement.
use Template::Decalre::Tags
@Template::Declare::Tags::TagSubs is aliased to this variable for backward-compatibility.
@Template::Declare::Tags::TagSubs
$Template::Declare::Tags::TAG_NEST_DEPTH
Controls the indentation of the XML tags in the final outputs. For example, you can temporarily disable a tag's indentation by the following lines of code:
body { pre { local $Template::Declare::Tags::TAG_NEST_DEPTH = 0; script { attr { src => 'foo.js' } } } }
It generates
<body> <pre> <script src="foo.js"></script> </pre> </body>
Note that now the script tag has no indentation and we've got what we want. ;)
script
$Template::Declare::Tags::SKIP_XML_ESCAPING
Disables XML escape postprocessing entirely. Use at your own risk.
Template::Declare::TagSet::HTML, Template::Declare::TagSet::XUL, Template::Declare.
Jesse Vincent <jesse@bestpractical.com>
Agent Zhang <agentzh@yahoo.cn>
Copyright 2006-2009 Best Practical Solutions, LLC.
To install Template::Declare, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Template::Declare
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Template::Declare
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.