man Petal () - Perl Template Attribute Language - TAL for Perl!

NAME

Petal - Perl Template Attribute Language - TAL for Perl!

SYNOPSIS

in your Perl code:

  use Petal;
  my $template = new Petal ('foo.xhtml');
  print $template->process (bar => 'BAZ');

in foo.xhtml

  <html xmlns:tal="http://purl.org/petal/1.0/">
    <body tal:content="bar">Dummy Content</body>
  </html>

and you get something like:

  <html>
    <body>BAZ</body>
  </html>

SUMMARY

Petal is a XML based templating engine that is able to process any kind of XML, XHTML and HTML.

Petal borrows a lot of good ideas from the Zope Page Templates TAL specification, it is very well suited for the creation of WYSIWYG XHTML editable templates.

The idea is to further enforce the separation of logic from presentation. With Petal, graphic designers can use their favorite WYSIWYG editor to easily edit templates without having to worry about the loops and ifs which happen behind the scene.

NAMESPACE

Although this is not mandatory, Petal templates should include use the namespace <http://purl.org/petal/1.0/>. Example:

    <html xml:lang="en"
          lang="en"
         
          xmlns:tal="http://purl.org/petal/1.0/">

      Blah blah blah...
      Content of the file
      More blah blah...
    </html>

If you do not specify the namespace, Petal will by default try to use the CWpetal: prefix. However, in all the examples of this POD we'll use the CWtal: prefix to avoid too much typing.

KICKSTART

Let's say you have the following Perl code:

    use Petal;
    local $Petal::OUTPUT = 'XHTML';

    my $template = new Petal ('foo.xhtml');
    template->process ( my_var => some_object() );

some_object() is a subroutine that returns some kind of object, may it be a scalar, object, array referebce or hash reference. Let's see what we can do...

Version 1: WYSIWYG friendly prototype.

Using TAL you can do:

    This is the variable 'my_var' :
    <span tal:replace="my_var/hello_world">Hola, Mundo!</span>

Now you can open your template in any WYSIWYG tool (mozilla composer, frontpage, dreamweaver, adobe golive...) and work with less risk of damaging your petal commands.

Version 2: Object-oriented version

Let's now say that CWmy_var is actually an object with a method hello_world() that returns Hello World. To output the same result, your line, which was:

    <span tal:replace="my_var/hello_world">Hola, Mundo!</span>

Would need to be... EXACTLY the same. Petal lets you access hashes and objects in an entirely transparent way and tries to automagically do The Right Thing for you.

This high level of polymorphism means that in most cases you can maintain your code, swap hashes for objects, and not change a single line of your template code.

Version 3: Personalizable

Now let's say that your method hello_world() can take an optional argument so that CW$some_object->hello_world ('Jack') returns Hello Jack.

You would write:

    <span tal:replace="my_var/hello_world 'Jack'">Hola, Mundo!</span>

Optionally, you can get rid of the quotes by using two dashes, a la GNU command-line option:

    <span tal:replace="my_var/hello_world --Jack">Hola, Mundo!</span>

So you can pass parameters to methods using double dashes or quotes. Now let us say that your CWmy_var object also has a method current_user() that returns the current user real name. You can do:

    <span tal:replace="my_var/hello_world my_var/current_user">Hola, Mundo!</span>

TRAP:

You cannot write nested expressions such as:

    ${my_var/hello_world ${my_var/current_user}}

This will NOT work. At least, not yet.

Version 4: Internationalized

Let's say that you have a directory called CWhello_world with the following files:

    hello_world/en.xhtml
    hello_world/fr.xhtml
    hello_world/es.xhtml

You can use Petal as follows in your Perl code:

    use Petal;
    local $Petal::OUTPUT = 'XHTML';

    my $template = new Petal ( file => 'hello_world', lang => 'fr-CA' );
    print $template->process ( my_var => some_object() );

What will happen is that the CW$template object will try to find a file named CWfr-CA, then CWfr, then will default to <en>. It should work fine for includes, too!

NOTE: There is now beta support for ZPT-like i18n attributes, which should provide a much nicer framework. See Petal::I18N for details.

TIP:

If you feel that 'en' should not be the default language, you can specify a different default:

    my $template = new Petal (
        file             => 'hello_world',
        language         => 'zh',
        default_language => 'fr' # vive la France!
    );

TRAP:

If you do specify the CWlang option, you MUST use a path to a template directory, not a file directory.

Conversely, if you do not specify a CWlang option, you MUST use a path to a template file, not a directory.

OPTIONS

When you create a Petal template object you can specify various options using name => value pairs as arguments to the constructor. For example:

  my $template = Petal->new(
    file     => 'gerbils.html',
    base_dir => '/var/www/petshop',
    input    => 'HTML',
    output   => 'HTML',
  );

The recognized options are:

file => filename

The template filename. This option is mandatory and has no default.

Note: If you also use 'language' this option should point to a directory.

base_dir => pathname | [ pathname list ] (default: '.')

The directories listed in this option will be searched in turn to locate the template file. A single directory can be specified as a scalar. For a directory list use an arrayref.

input => 'HTML' | 'XHTML' | 'XML' (default: 'XML')

Defines the format of the template files. Recognised values are:

  'HTML'  - Alias for 'XHTML'
  'XHTML' - Petal will use Petal::Parser to parse the template
  'XML'   - Petal will use Petal::Parser to parse the template

output => 'HTML' | 'XHTML' | 'XML' (default: 'XML')

Defines the format of the data generated as a result of processing the template files. Recognised values are:

  'HTML'  - Petal will output XHTML, self-closing certain tags
  'XHTML' - Alias for 'HTML'
  'XML'   - Petal will output generic XML

language => language code

For internationalized applications, you can use the 'file' option to point to a directory and select a language-specific template within that directory using the 'language' option. Languages are selected using a two letter code (eg: 'fr') optionally followed by a hyphen and a two letter country code (eg: 'fr-CA').

default_language => language code (default: 'en')

This language code will be used if no template matches the selected language-country or language.

taint => true | false (default: false)

If set to CWtrue, makes perl taint mode happy.

error_on_undef_var => true | false (default: true)

If set to CWtrue, Petal will confess() errors when trying to access undefined template variables, otherwise an empty string will be returned.

disk_cache => true | false (default: true)

If set to CWfalse, Petal will not use the CWPetal::Cache::Disk module.

memory_cache => true | false (default: true)

If set to CWfalse, Petal will not use the CWPetal::Cache::Memory module.

max_includes => number (default: 30)

The maximum number of recursive includes before Petal stops processing. This is to guard against accidental infinite recursions.

debug_dump => true | false (default: true)

If this option is true, when Petal cannot process a template it will output lots of debugging information in a temporary file which you can inspect.

encode_charset => charset (default: undef)

This option is _DEPRECATED_ as of Petal 2.01. Petal will now always return results in Perl's internal form.

It doesn't guarantee that the result will be in UTF-8 or in your local encoding, but at least the UTF-8 flag should be set properly.

If you want to encode the results for a specific charset, you should look at the module Encode.

decode_charset => charset (default: undef)

This option will work only if you use Perl 5.8 or greater.

If specified, Petal will assume that the template to be processed (and its sub-templates) are in the character set charset.

charset can be any character set that can be used with the module Encode.

TAL SYNTAX

This functionality is directly and shamelessly stolen from the excellent TAL specification: <http://www.zope.org/Wikis/DevSite/Projects/ZPT/TAL>.

define

Abstract

  <tag tal:define="variable_name EXPRESSION">

Evaluates CWEXPRESSION and assigns the returned value to CWvariable_name.

Example

  <!--? sets document/title to 'title' -->
  <span tal:define="title document/title">

Why?

This can be useful if you have a CWvery/very/long/expression. You can set it to let's say CWvvle and then use CWvvle instead of using CWvery/very/long/expression.

condition (ifs)

Abstract

  <tag tal:condition="true:EXPRESSION">
     blah blah blah
  </tag>

Example

  <span tal:condition="true:user/is_authenticated">
    Yo, authenticated!
  </span>

Why?

Conditions can be used to display something if an expression is true. They can also be used to check that a list exists before attempting to loop through it.

repeat (loops)

Abstract

  <tag tal:repeat="element_name EXPRESSION">
     blah blah blah
  </tag>

Example:

  <li tal:repeat="user system/user_list">$user/real_name</li>

A select list with one item selected:

  <select>
    <option
      selected="selected"
      tal:attributes="value self/selected_lang/value"
      tal:content="self/selected_lang/label"
    >English</option>
    <option
      value="i-klingon"
      tal:repeat="lang self/unselected_langs;"
      tal:attributes="value lang/value"
      tal:content="lang/label"
    >Klingon</option>
  </select>

A table with rows of alternating colours set via CSS:

  <table>
    <div
      tal:omit-tag=""
      tal:repeat="audience self/audiences"
    >
      <tr 
        class="odd"
        tal:condition="true: repeat/odd"
      >
        <td>
          This a odd row, it comes before the even row.
        </td>
      </tr>
      <tr 
        class="even"
        tal:condition="true: repeat/even"
      >
        <td> 
          This a even row.
        </td>
      </tr>
    </div>
  </table>

Why?

Repeat statements are used to loop through a list of values, typically to display the resulting records of a database query.

attributes

Abstract

  <tag tal:attributes="attr1 EXPRESSION_1; attr2 EXPRESSION_2"; ...">
     blah blah blah
  </tag>

Example

  <a href="http://www.gianthard.com"
     lang="en-gb"
     tal:attributes="href document/href_relative; lang document/lang">

Why?

Attributes statements can be used to template a tag's attributes.

content

Abstract

  <tag tal:content="EXPRESSION">Dummy Data To Replace With EXPRESSION</tag>

By default, the characters greater than, lesser than, double quote and ampersand are encoded to the entities &lt;, &gt;, &quot; and &amp; respectively. If you don't want them to (because the result of your expression is already encoded) you have to use the CWstructure keyword.

Example

  <span tal:content="title">Dummy Title</span>

  <span tal:content="structure some/variable">
     blah blah blah
  </span>

Why?

It lets you replace the contents of a tag with whatever value the evaluation of EXPRESSION returned. This is handy because you can fill your templates with dummy content which will make them usable in a WYSIWYG tool.

replace

Abstract

  <tag tal:replace="EXPRESSION">
    This time the entire tag is replaced
    rather than just the content!
  </tag>

Example

  <span tal:replace="title">Dummy Title</span>

Why?

Similar reasons to CWcontent. Note however that CWtal:content and CWtal:replace are *NOT* aliases. The former will replace the contents of the tag, while the latter will replace the whole tag.

Indeed you cannot use CWtal:content and CWtal:replace in the same tag.

omit-tag

Abstract

  <tag tal:omit-tag="EXPRESSION">Some contents</tag>

Example

  <b tal:omit-tag="not:bold">I may not be bold.</b>

If CWnot:bold is evaluated as TRUE, then the <b> tag will be omited. If CWnot:bold is evaluated as FALSE, then the <b> tag will stay in place.

Why?

omit-tag statements can be used to leave the contents of a tag in place while omitting the surrounding start and end tags if the expression which is evaluated is TRUE.

TIP:

If you want to ALWAYS remove a tag, you can use CWomit-tag="string:1"

on-error

Abstract

  <tag on-error="EXPRESSION">...</tag>

Example

  <p on-error="string:Cannot access object/method!!">
    $object/method
  </p>

Why?

When Petal encounters an error, it usually dies with some obscure error message. The CWon-error statement lets you trap the error and replace it with a proper error message.

using multiple statements

You can do things like:

  <p tal:define="children document/children"
     tal:condition="children"
     tal:repeat="child children"
     tal:attributes="lang child/lang; xml:lang child/lang"
     tal:content="child/data"
     tal:on-error="string:Ouch!">Some Dummy Content</p>

Given the fact that XML attributes are not ordered, withing the same tag statements will be executed in the following order:

    define
    condition
    repeat
        attributes
        content
    OR
        replace
    OR
        omit-tag
        content

TRAP:

Don't forget that the default prefix is CWpetal: NOT CWtal:, until you set the petal namespace in your HTML or XML document as follows:

    <html xmlns:tal="http://purl.org/petal/1.0/">

METAL MACROS

Petal supports an implementation of the METAL specification, which is a very WYSIWYG compatible way of doing template includes.

define-macro

In order to define a macro inside a file (i.e. a fragment to be included), you use the metal:define-macro directive. For example:

  File foo.xml
  ============

  <html xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal">
    <body>
      <p metal:define-macro="footer">
        (c) Me (r)(tm) (pouet pouet)
      </p>
    </body>
  </html>

use-macro

In order to use a previously defined macro, you use the metal:use-macro directive. For example:

  File bar.xml
  ============

  <html xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal">
    <body>
      ... plenty of content ...

      <p metal:use-macro="foo.xml#footer">
        Page Footer.
      </p>
    </body>
  </html>

define-slot

In any given macro you can define slots, which are bits of macros that can be overriden by something else using the fill-macro directive. To re-use the example above, imagine that we want to be able to optionally override the (pouet pouet) bit with something else:

  File foo.xml
  ============

  <html xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal">
    <body>
      <p metal:define-macro="footer">
        (c) Me (r)(tm) <span metal:define-slot="pouet">(pouet pouet)</span>
      </p>
    </body>
  </html>

fill-slot

Your including file can override any slot using the fill-slot instruction, i.e.

  File bar.xml
  ============

  <html xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal">
    <body>
      ... plenty of content ...

      <p metal:use-macro="foo.xml#footer">
        Page Footer. <span metal:fill-slot="pouet" petal:omit-tag="">(bar baz)</span>
      </p>
    </body>
  </html>

This would result in the macro 'foo.xml#footer' to produce:

  <html>
    <body>
      <p>
        (c) Me (r)(tm) (bar baz)
      </p>
    </body>
  </html>

self includes

In Zope, METAL macros are expanded first, and then the TAL instructions are processed. However with Petal, METAL macros are expanded at run-time just like regular includes, which allows for recursive macros.

This example templates a sitemap, which on a hierarchically organized site would be recursive by nature:

  <html xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal"
        xmlns:petal="http://purl.org/petal/1.0/">
    <body>
      <p>Sitemap:</p>

      <li metal:define-macro="recurse">
        <a href="#"
           petal:attributes="href child/Full_Path" 
           petal:content="child/Title"
        >Child Document Title</a>
        <ul 
          petal:define="children child/Children"
          petal:condition="children"
          petal:repeat="child children"
        >
          <li metal:use-macro="#recurse">Dummy Child 1</li>
          <li petal:replace="nothing">Dummy Child 2</li>
          <li petal:replace="nothing">Dummy Child 3</li>
        </ul>
      </li>
    </body>
  </html>

EXPRESSIONS AND MODIFIERS

Petal has the ability to bind template variables to the following Perl datatypes: scalars, lists, hash, arrays and objects. The article describes the syntax which is used to access these from Petal templates.

In the following examples, we'll assume that the template is used as follows:

  my $hashref = some_complex_data_structure();
  my $template = new Petal ('foo.xml');
  print $template->process ( $hashref );

Then we will show how the Petal Expression Syntax maps to the Perl way of accessing these values.

accessing scalar values

Perl expression

  $hashref->{'some_value'};

Petal expression

  some_value

Example

  <!--? Replaces Hello, World with the contents of
        $hashref->{'some_value'}
  -->
  <span tal:replace="some_value">Hello, World</span>

accessing hashes & arrays

Perl expression

  $hashref->{'some_hash'}->{'a_key'};

Petal expression

  some_hash/a_key

Example

  <!--? Replaces Hello, World with the contents
        of $hashref->{'some_hash'}->{'a_key'}
  -->
  <span tal:replace="some_hash/a_key">Hello, World</span>

Perl expression

  $hashref->{'some_array'}->[12]

Petal expression

  some_array/12

Example

  <!--? Replaces Hello, World with the contents
       of $hashref->{'some_array'}->[12]
  -->
  <span tal:replace="some_array/12">Hello, World</span>

Note: You're more likely to want to loop through arrays:

  <!--? Loops trough the array and displays each values -->
  <ul tal:condition="some_array">
    <li tal:repeat="value some_array"
        tal:content="value">Hello, World</li>
  </ul>

accessing object methods

Perl expressions

  1. $hashref->{'some_object'}->some_method();
  2. $hashref->{'some_object'}->some_method ('foo', 'bar');
  3. $hashref->{'some_object'}->some_method ($hashref->{'some_variable'})

Petal expressions

  1. some_object/some_method
  2a. some_object/some_method 'foo' 'bar'
  2b. some_object/some_method "foo" "bar"
  2c. some_object/some_method --foo --bar
  3. some_object/some_method some_variable

Note that the syntax as described in 2c works only if you use strings which do not contain spaces.

Example

  <p>
    <span tal:replace="value1">2</span> times
    <span tal:replace="value2">2</span> equals
    <span tal:replace="math_object/multiply value1 value2">4</span>
  </p>

composing

Petal lets you traverse any data structure, i.e.

Perl expression

  $hashref->{'some_object'}
          ->some_method()
          ->{'key2'}
          ->some_other_method ( 'foo', $hash->{bar} );

Petal expression

  some_object/some_method/key2/some_other_method --foo bar

true:EXPRESSION

  If EXPRESSION returns an array reference
    If this array reference has at least one element
      Returns TRUE
    Else
      Returns FALSE

  Else
    If EXPRESSION returns a TRUE value (according to Perl 'trueness')
      Returns TRUE
    Else
      Returns FALSE

the CWtrue: modifiers should always be used when doing Petal conditions.

false:EXPRESSION

I'm pretty sure you can work this one out by yourself :-)

set:variable_name EXPRESSION

Sets the value returned by the evaluation of EXPRESSION in CW$hash->{variable_name}. For instance:

Perl expression:

  $hash->{variable_name} = $hash->{object}->method();

Petal expression:

  set:variable_name object/method

string:STRING_EXPRESSION

The CWstring: modifier lets you interpolate petal expressions within a string and returns the value.

  string:Welcome $user/real_name, it is $date!

Alternatively, you could write:

  string:Welcome ${user/real_name}, it is ${date}!

The advantage of using curly brackets is that it lets you interpolate expressions which invoke methods with parameters, i.e.

  string:The current CGI 'action' param is: ${cgi/param --action}

ADVANCED PETAL

writing your own modifiers

Petal lets you write your own modifiers, either using coderefs or modules.

Coderefs

Let's say that you want to write an uppercase: modifier, which would uppercase the result of an expression evaluation, as in:

  uppercase:string:Hello, World

Would return

  HELLO, WORLD

Here is what you can do:

  # don't forget the trailing colon in C<uppercase:> !!
  $Petal::Hash::MODIFIERS->{'uppercase:'} = sub {
      my $hash = shift;
      my $args = shift;

      my $result = $hash->fetch ($args);
      return uc ($result);
  };

Modules.

You might want to use a module rather than a coderef. Here is the example above reimplemented as a module:

    package Petal::Hash::UpperCase;
    use strict;
    use warnings;

    sub process {
      my $class = shift;
      my $hash  = shift;
      my $args  = shift;

      my $result = $hash->fetch ($args);
      return uc ($result);
    }

    1;

As long as your module is in the namespace Petal::Hash::<YourModifierName>, Petal will automatically pick it up and assign it to its lowercased name, i.e. in our example CWuppercase:.

If your modifier is OUTSIDE Petal::Hash::<YourModifierName>, you need to make Petal aware of its existence as follows:

  use MyPetalModifier::UpperCase;
  $Petal::Hash::MODIFIERS->{'uppercase:'} = 'MyPetalModifier::UpperCase';

Expression keywords

XML encoding / structure keyword

By default Petal will encode CW&, CW<, > and CW" to CW&amp;, CW&lt;, CW&gt and CW&quot; respectively. However sometimes you might want to display an expression which is already encoded, in which case you can use the CWstructure keyword.

  structure my/encoded/variable

Note that this is a language keyword, not a modifier. It does not use a trailing colon.

Petal::Hash caching and fresh keyword

Petal caches the expressions which it resolves, i.e. if you write the expression:

  string:$foo/bar, ${baz/buz/blah}

Petal::Hash will compute it once, and then for subsequent accesses to that expression always return the same value. This is almost never a problem, even for loops because a new Petal::Hash object is used for each iteration in order to support proper scoping.

However, in some rare cases you might not want to have that behavior, in which case you need to prefix your expression with the CWfresh keyword, i.e.

  fresh string:$foo/bar, ${baz/buz/blah}

You can use CWfresh with CWstructure if you need to:

  fresh structure string:$foo/bar, ${baz/buz/blah}

However the reverse does not work:

  <!--? VERY BAD, WON'T WORK !!! -->
  structure fresh string:$foo/bar, ${baz/buz/blah}

TOY FUNCTIONS (For debugging or if you're curious)

perl -MPetal -e canonical template.xml

Displays the canonical template for template.xml. You can set CW$Petal::INPUT using by setting the PETAL_INPUT environment variable. You can set CW$Petal::OUTPUT using by setting the PETAL_OUTPUT environment variable.

perl -MPetal -e code template.xml

Displays the perl code for template.xml. You can set CW$Petal::INPUT using by setting the PETAL_INPUT environment variable. You can set CW$Petal::OUTPUT using by setting the PETAL_OUTPUT environment variable.

perl -MPetal -e lcode template.xml

Displays the perl code for template.xml, with line numbers. You can set CW$Petal::INPUT using by setting the PETAL_INPUT environment variable. You can set CW$Petal::OUTPUT using by setting the PETAL_OUTPUT environment variable.

What does Petal do internally?

The cycle of a Petal template is the following:

    1. Read the source XML template
    2. $INPUT (XML or HTML) throws XML events from the source file
    3. $OUTPUT (XML or HTML) uses these XML events to canonicalize the template
    4. Petal::CodeGenerator turns the canonical template into Perl code
    5. Petal::Cache::Disk caches the Perl code on disk
    6. Petal turns the perl code into a subroutine
    7. Petal::Cache::Memory caches the subroutine in memory
    8. Petal executes the subroutine
    9. (optional) Petal internationalizes the resulting output.

If you are under a persistent environement a la mod_perl, subsequent calls to the same template will be reduced to step 8 until the source template changes.

Otherwise, subsequent calls will resume at step 6, until the source template changes.

DECRYPTING WARNINGS AND ERRORS

Petal was not able to import one of the modules. This error warning will be issued when Petal is unable to load a plugin because it has been badly install or is just broken. You don't need to use encode:EXPRESSION to XML-encode expression anymore, Petal does it for you. encode: has been turned into a no-op.

Cannot find value for ... (FATAL)

You tried to invoke an/expression/like/this/one but Petal could not resolve it. This could be because an/expression/like evaluated to undef and hence the remaining this/one could not be resolved.

Usually Petal gives you a line number and a dump of your template as Perl code. You can look at the perl code to try to determine the faulty bit in your template.

not well-formed (invalid token) at ... (FATAL)

Petal was trying to parse a file that is not well-formed XML or that has strange entities in it. Try to run xmllint on your file to see if it's well formed or try to use the CW$Petal::INPUT = 'XHTML' option.

other errors

Either I've forgot to document it, or it's a bug. Send an email to the Petal mailing list.

EXPORTS

None.

AUTHOR

Copyright 2003 - MKDoc Ltd.

Authors: Jean-Michel Hiver, Fergal Daly <fergal@esatclear.ie>, and others.

This module free software and is distributed under the same license as Perl itself. Use it at your own risk.

Thanks to everybody on the list who contributed to Petal in the form of patches, bug reports and suggestions. See README for a list of contributors.

SEE ALSO

Join the Petal mailing list:

  http://lists.webarch.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/petal

Mailing list archives:

  http://lists.webarch.co.uk/pipermail/petal

Have a peek at the TAL / TALES / METAL specs:

  http://www.zope.org/Wikis/DevSite/Projects/ZPT/TAL
  http://www.zope.org/Wikis/DevSite/Projects/ZPT/TALES
  http://www.zope.org/Wikis/DevSite/Projects/ZPT/METAL