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A Lithium PHP plugin to allow for template inheritance. Seems like a good idea.

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Lithium PHP Plugin to allow for savvy template inheritance


Don't get too excited, this project has only just started and it's currently fairly rough


Installation

Use Composer

It's like pie... In that it's awesome, and so is pie!

New to Composer? Have no fear, it's easy and well worth taking on: This will help.

Modify your projects composer.json file

{
    "require": {
    	...
        "joseym/li3_hierarchy": "master"
        ...
    }
}

Run php composer.phar install (or php composer.phar update) and, aside from adding it to your Libraries, you should be good to go.

Clone, Download, or Submodule

Old Timey Way

  1. Clone/Download/submodule the plugin into your app's libraries directory.
  2. Tell your app to load the plugin by adding the following to your app's config/bootstrap/libraries.php:

Usage

Add the plugin in your config/bootstrap/libraries.php file:

<?php
	Libraries::add('li3_hierarchy', array(
		'cache' => true // optional configuration, defaults to true in prod, false everywhere else.
	));
?>

With this plugin you no longer assign views to layouts the same way as with core lithium templates.

Originial Method

Your Layout

<html>
	<head>...</head>
	<body>
		...
		<section><?php echo $this->content(); ?></section>
		...
	</body>
</html>

This method blocks a single section in your layout, all content that reside within views will end up here.

While I dont think this is technically bad it does seem a bit limiting

Hierarchical method

Your Layout

layouts/default.html.php

<html>
	<head>...</head>
	<body>
		...
		<section>{:block "content"}Default Content{block:}</section>
		<div id="sidebar">{:block "sidebar"}Default Sidebar{block:}</div>
		...
	</body>
</html>

So here we have set 2 sections, content and sidebar. We can change these sections anytime from any view.

Here's how

Home View

pages/home.html.php

{:parent "layout/default.html.php":}

{:block "content"}
	<h2>Welcome to My site!</h2>
	This is my home page, please wipe your feet.
{block:}

{:block "sidebar"}
	<ul>
		<li><a href="#about">About Me</a></li>
		<li><a href="#github">My Github Profile</a></li>
	</ul>
{block:}

So you read this and think to yourself ... "ok, what's so special about that?"

quit heckling, heckler!

Now you want to create that "About Me" page. Because time is short and you're eager to go eat a sandwich you've decided that, for now, the only difference between it and the home page is the sidebar. You don't want it to show the link to the "About Me" page, but rather show the link to the "Home" page. ("wow, baffling example Josey!")

Well, rather than rewriting that page you simply assign it's parent to the home page and modify the sidebar block:

About Me

pages/about.html.php

{:parent "pages/home.html.php":}

{:block "sidebar"}
	<ul>
		<li><a href="#home">Home</a></li>
		<li><a href="#github">My Github Profile</a></li>
	</ul>
{block:}

Ok, I realize this is a painfully simple example but I hope it gets the point across.

This becomes especially useful when dealing with large, complicated project, when certain pages only modify a section or two.

Other Features

This plugin gives you the ability to include content from parent/child templates wherever you'd like them.

Parent Requests

About Me

pages/about.html.php

{:parent "pages/home.html.php":}

{:block "sidebar"}
	{:parent:}
	<ul>
		<li><a href="#home">Home</a></li>
		<li><a href="#github">My Github Profile</a></li>
	</ul>
{block:}

The {:parent:} line above tells the renderer to load the content that is stored within pages/home.html.php block sidebar above the content you are assigning in pages/about.html.php block sidebar.

You can also optionally force the parent to use the rendering, namely specialized paths, for a specifc type (layout/template). To do so specify layout/template directly after :parent.

{:parent layout "pages/home":}
Child Requests

Similar to the above example: you can place child content from parents

Home Page

pages/home.html.php

{:parent "pages/default.html.php":}

{:block "sidebar"}
	<ul>
		<li><a href="#home">Home</a></li>
		<li><a href="#github">My Github Profile</a></li>
	</ul>
	{:child"}
{block:}

Now whatever you add in the sidebar block within the pages/about.html.php template will be loaded in after the content that resides in the sidebar block of the pages/home.html.php template!

Wrapping Blocks

There will be times when you may want to load child content within markup but not load that markup if no child exists.

Here is how you accomplish that. It's easy!

Home Page

pages/home.html.php

{:parent "pages/default.html.php":}

{:block "advert"}
	<div class="leaderboard advert">
	{:child"}
	</div>
{block:}

Like in the child example above this will load whatever content you assign within the advert block from any child templates (templates that assign pages/home.html.php as their parent).

What happens if a page that extends pages/home.html.php doesn't have an advert block? The entire block is removed! If you assign an advert block from a child, however, the contents will be loaded within the <div class="advert ..." /> markup.

Some Notes

  1. This project currently uses similar formatting to many "PHP Template Engines", but is not, in fact, a template engine itself. You would go about every other lithium layout/view effort exactly as before. This project only attempts to meet a need to offer more power and inheritance to the rendering method of views.

  2. This project was inspired while I worked a plugin to provide Smarty PHP support for Lithium project. (blech)! As I can't stand working with PHP Template Engines but actually think Smarty's template inheritance is a good idea I decided to attempt to achieve/improve upon it without being stuck with the limitations that Smarty enforces.

Plans for the future

  1. I plan for this plugin to be able to handle blocks defined and modified from within other blocks, currently it does not support this.
  2. Caching: I need to figure out a good way to cache the ladder of templates but still know when a modification was made.

Collaborate

As always, I welcome your collaboration to make things "even more betterer", so fork and contribute if you feel so inclined.

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