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Recipes ======= Making a Layout conditional --------------------------- Working with Ajax means that the same content is sometimes displayed as is, and sometimes decorated with a layout. As Twig layout template names can be any valid expression, you can pass a variable that evaluates to ``true`` when the request is made via Ajax and choose the layout accordingly: .. code-block:: jinja {% extends request.ajax ? "base_ajax.html" : "base.html" %} {% block content %} This is the content to be displayed. {% endblock %} Making an Include dynamic ------------------------- When including a template, its name does not need to be a string. For instance, the name can depend on the value of a variable: .. code-block:: jinja {% include var ~ '_foo.html' %} If ``var`` evaluates to ``index``, the ``index_foo.html`` template will be rendered. As a matter of fact, the template name can be any valid expression, such as the following: .. code-block:: jinja {% include var|default('index') ~ '_foo.html' %} Overriding a Template that also extends itself ---------------------------------------------- A template can be customized in two different ways: * *Inheritance*: A template *extends* a parent template and overrides some blocks; * *Replacement*: If you use the filesystem loader, Twig loads the first template it finds in a list of configured directories; a template found in a directory *replaces* another one from a directory further in the list. But how do you combine both: *replace* a template that also extends itself (aka a template in a directory further in the list)? Let's say that your templates are loaded from both ``.../templates/mysite`` and ``.../templates/default`` in this order. The ``page.twig`` template, stored in ``.../templates/default`` reads as follows: .. code-block:: jinja {# page.twig #} {% extends "layout.twig" %} {% block content %} {% endblock %} You can replace this template by putting a file with the same name in ``.../templates/mysite``. And if you want to extend the original template, you might be tempted to write the following: .. code-block:: jinja {# page.twig in .../templates/mysite #} {% extends "page.twig" %} {# from .../templates/default #} Of course, this will not work as Twig will always load the template from ``.../templates/mysite``. It turns out it is possible to get this to work, by adding a directory right at the end of your template directories, which is the parent of all of the other directories: ``.../templates`` in our case. This has the effect of making every template file within our system uniquely addressable. Most of the time you will use the "normal" paths, but in the special case of wanting to extend a template with an overriding version of itself we can reference its parent's full, unambiguous template path in the extends tag: .. code-block:: jinja {# page.twig in .../templates/mysite #} {% extends "default/page.twig" %} {# from .../templates #} .. note:: This recipe was inspired by the following Django wiki page: http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/ExtendingTemplates Customizing the Syntax ---------------------- Twig allows some syntax customization for the block delimiters. It's not recommended to use this feature as templates will be tied with your custom syntax. But for specific projects, it can make sense to change the defaults. To change the block delimiters, you need to create your own lexer object:: $twig = new Twig_Environment(); $lexer = new Twig_Lexer($twig, array( 'tag_comment' => array('{#', '#}'), 'tag_block' => array('{%', '%}'), 'tag_variable' => array('{{', '}}'), 'interpolation' => array('#{', '}'), )); $twig->setLexer($lexer); Here are some configuration example that simulates some other template engines syntax:: // Ruby erb syntax $lexer = new Twig_Lexer($twig, array( 'tag_comment' => array('<%#', '%>'), 'tag_block' => array('<%', '%>'), 'tag_variable' => array('<%=', '%>'), )); // SGML Comment Syntax $lexer = new Twig_Lexer($twig, array( 'tag_comment' => array('<!--#', '-->'), 'tag_block' => array('<!--', '-->'), 'tag_variable' => array('${', '}'), )); // Smarty like $lexer = new Twig_Lexer($twig, array( 'tag_comment' => array('{*', '*}'), 'tag_block' => array('{', '}'), 'tag_variable' => array('{$', '}'), )); Using dynamic Object Properties ------------------------------- When Twig encounters a variable like ``article.title``, it tries to find a ``title`` public property in the ``article`` object. It also works if the property does not exist but is rather defined dynamically thanks to the magic ``__get()`` method; you just need to also implement the ``__isset()`` magic method like shown in the following snippet of code:: class Article { public function __get($name) { if ('title' == $name) { return 'The title'; } // throw some kind of error } public function __isset($name) { if ('title' == $name) { return true; } return false; } } Accessing the parent Context in Nested Loops -------------------------------------------- Sometimes, when using nested loops, you need to access the parent context. The parent context is always accessible via the ``loop.parent`` variable. For instance, if you have the following template data:: $data = array( 'topics' => array( 'topic1' => array('Message 1 of topic 1', 'Message 2 of topic 1'), 'topic2' => array('Message 1 of topic 2', 'Message 2 of topic 2'), ), ); And the following template to display all messages in all topics: .. code-block:: jinja {% for topic, messages in topics %} * {{ loop.index }}: {{ topic }} {% for message in messages %} - {{ loop.parent.loop.index }}.{{ loop.index }}: {{ message }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} The output will be similar to: .. code-block:: text * 1: topic1 - 1.1: The message 1 of topic 1 - 1.2: The message 2 of topic 1 * 2: topic2 - 2.1: The message 1 of topic 2 - 2.2: The message 2 of topic 2 In the inner loop, the ``loop.parent`` variable is used to access the outer context. So, the index of the current ``topic`` defined in the outer for loop is accessible via the ``loop.parent.loop.index`` variable. Defining undefined Functions and Filters on the Fly --------------------------------------------------- When a function (or a filter) is not defined, Twig defaults to throw a ``Twig_Error_Syntax`` exception. However, it can also call a `callback`_ (any valid PHP callable) which should return a function (or a filter). For filters, register callbacks with ``registerUndefinedFilterCallback()``. For functions, use ``registerUndefinedFunctionCallback()``:: // auto-register all native PHP functions as Twig functions // don't try this at home as it's not secure at all! $twig->registerUndefinedFunctionCallback(function ($name) { if (function_exists($name)) { return new Twig_Function_Function($name); } return false; }); If the callable is not able to return a valid function (or filter), it must return ``false``. If you register more than one callback, Twig will call them in turn until one does not return ``false``. .. tip:: As the resolution of functions and filters is done during compilation, there is no overhead when registering these callbacks. Validating the Template Syntax ------------------------------ When template code is provided by a third-party (through a web interface for instance), it might be interesting to validate the template syntax before saving it. If the template code is stored in a `$template` variable, here is how you can do it:: try { $twig->parse($twig->tokenize($template)); // the $template is valid } catch (Twig_Error_Syntax $e) { // $template contains one or more syntax errors } If you iterate over a set of files, you can pass the filename to the ``tokenize()`` method to get the filename in the exception message:: foreach ($files as $file) { try { $twig->parse($twig->tokenize($template, $file)); // the $template is valid } catch (Twig_Error_Syntax $e) { // $template contains one or more syntax errors } } .. note:: This method won't catch any sandbox policy violations because the policy is enforced during template rendering (as Twig needs the context for some checks like allowed methods on objects). Refreshing modified Templates when APC is enabled and apc.stat = 0 ------------------------------------------------------------------ When using APC with ``apc.stat`` set to ``0`` and Twig cache enabled, clearing the template cache won't update the APC cache. To get around this, one can extend ``Twig_Environment`` and force the update of the APC cache when Twig rewrites the cache:: class Twig_Environment_APC extends Twig_Environment { protected function writeCacheFile($file, $content) { parent::writeCacheFile($file, $content); // Compile cached file into bytecode cache apc_compile_file($file); } } Reusing a stateful Node Visitor ------------------------------- When attaching a visitor to a ``Twig_Environment`` instance, Twig uses it to visit *all* templates it compiles. If you need to keep some state information around, you probably want to reset it when visiting a new template. This can be easily achieved with the following code:: protected $someTemplateState = array(); public function enterNode(Twig_NodeInterface $node, Twig_Environment $env) { if ($node instanceof Twig_Node_Module) { // reset the state as we are entering a new template $this->someTemplateState = array(); } // ... return $node; } Using the Template name to set the default Escaping Strategy ------------------------------------------------------------ .. versionadded:: 1.8 This recipe requires Twig 1.8 or later. The ``autoescape`` option determines the default escaping strategy to use when no escaping is applied on a variable. When Twig is used to mostly generate HTML files, you can set it to ``html`` and explicitly change it to ``js`` when you have some dynamic JavaScript files thanks to the ``autoescape`` tag: .. code-block:: jinja {% autoescape 'js' %} ... some JS ... {% endautoescape %} But if you have many HTML and JS files, and if your template names follow some conventions, you can instead determine the default escaping strategy to use based on the template name. Let's say that your template names always end with ``.html`` for HTML files, ``.js`` for JavaScript ones, and ``.css`` for stylesheets, here is how you can configure Twig:: class TwigEscapingGuesser { function guess($filename) { // get the format $format = substr($filename, strrpos($filename, '.') + 1); switch ($format) { case 'js': return 'js'; case 'css': return 'css'; case 'html': default: return 'html'; } } } $loader = new Twig_Loader_Filesystem('/path/to/templates'); $twig = new Twig_Environment($loader, array( 'autoescape' => array(new TwigEscapingGuesser(), 'guess'), )); This dynamic strategy does not incur any overhead at runtime as auto-escaping is done at compilation time. Using a Database to store Templates ----------------------------------- If you are developing a CMS, templates are usually stored in a database. This recipe gives you a simple PDO template loader you can use as a starting point for your own. First, let's create a temporary in-memory SQLite3 database to work with:: $dbh = new PDO('sqlite::memory:'); $dbh->exec('CREATE TABLE templates (name STRING, source STRING, last_modified INTEGER)'); $base = '{% block content %}{% endblock %}'; $index = ' {% extends "base.twig" %} {% block content %}Hello {{ name }}{% endblock %} '; $now = time(); $dbh->exec("INSERT INTO templates (name, source, last_modified) VALUES ('base.twig', '$base', $now)"); $dbh->exec("INSERT INTO templates (name, source, last_modified) VALUES ('index.twig', '$index', $now)"); We have created a simple ``templates`` table that hosts two templates: ``base.twig`` and ``index.twig``. Now, let's define a loader able to use this database:: class DatabaseTwigLoader implements Twig_LoaderInterface, Twig_ExistsLoaderInterface { protected $dbh; public function __construct(PDO $dbh) { $this->dbh = $dbh; } public function getSource($name) { if (false === $source = $this->getValue('source', $name)) { throw new Twig_Error_Loader(sprintf('Template "%s" does not exist.', $name)); } return $source; } // Twig_ExistsLoaderInterface as of Twig 1.11 public function exists($name) { return $name === $this->getValue('name', $name); } public function getCacheKey($name) { return $name; } public function isFresh($name, $time) { if (false === $lastModified = $this->getValue('last_modified', $name)) { return false; } return $lastModified <= $time; } protected function getValue($column, $name) { $sth = $this->dbh->prepare('SELECT '.$column.' FROM templates WHERE name = :name'); $sth->execute(array(':name' => (string) $name)); return $sth->fetchColumn(); } } Finally, here is an example on how you can use it:: $loader = new DatabaseTwigLoader($dbh); $twig = new Twig_Environment($loader); echo $twig->render('index.twig', array('name' => 'Fabien')); Using different Template Sources -------------------------------- This recipe is the continuation of the previous one. Even if you store the contributed templates in a database, you might want to keep the original/base templates on the filesystem. When templates can be loaded from different sources, you need to use the ``Twig_Loader_Chain`` loader. As you can see in the previous recipe, we reference the template in the exact same way as we would have done it with a regular filesystem loader. This is the key to be able to mix and match templates coming from the database, the filesystem, or any other loader for that matter: the template name should be a logical name, and not the path from the filesystem:: $loader1 = new DatabaseTwigLoader($dbh); $loader2 = new Twig_Loader_Array(array( 'base.twig' => '{% block content %}{% endblock %}', )); $loader = new Twig_Loader_Chain(array($loader1, $loader2)); $twig = new Twig_Environment($loader); echo $twig->render('index.twig', array('name' => 'Fabien')); Now that the ``base.twig`` templates is defined in an array loader, you can remove it from the database, and everything else will still work as before. .. _callback: http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.is-callable.php