The Templating Component¶
The Templating component provides all the tools needed to build any kind of template system.
It provides an infrastructure to load template files and optionally monitor them for changes. It also provides a concrete template engine implementation using PHP with additional tools for escaping and separating templates into blocks and layouts.
Installation¶
1 | $ composer require symfony/templating
|
注釈
If you install this component outside of a Symfony application, you must
require the vendor/autoload.php
file in your code to enable the class
autoloading mechanism provided by Composer. Read
this article for more details.
Usage¶
参考
This article explains how to use the Templating features as an independent component in any PHP application. Read the article about templates to learn about how to work with templates in Symfony applications.
The PhpEngine
class is the entry point
of the component. It needs a
template name parser (TemplateNameParserInterface
)
to convert a template name to a
template reference (TemplateReferenceInterface
).
It also needs a template loader (LoaderInterface
)
which uses the template reference to actually find and load the template:
use Symfony\Component\Templating\Loader\FilesystemLoader;
use Symfony\Component\Templating\PhpEngine;
use Symfony\Component\Templating\TemplateNameParser;
$filesystemLoader = new FilesystemLoader(__DIR__.'/views/%name%');
$templating = new PhpEngine(new TemplateNameParser(), $filesystemLoader);
echo $templating->render('hello.php', ['firstname' => 'Fabien']);
1 2 | <!-- views/hello.php -->
Hello, <?= $firstname ?>!
|
The render()
method parses
the views/hello.php
file and returns the output text. The second argument
of render
is an array of variables to use in the template. In this
example, the result will be Hello, Fabien!
.
注釈
Templates will be cached in the memory of the engine. This means that if you render the same template multiple times in the same request, the template will only be loaded once from the file system.
The $view
Variable¶
In all templates parsed by the PhpEngine
, you get access to a mysterious
variable called $view
. That variable holds the current PhpEngine
instance. That means you get access to a bunch of methods that make your life
easier.
Including Templates¶
The best way to share a snippet of template code is to create a template that
can then be included by other templates. As the $view
variable is an
instance of PhpEngine
, you can use the render()
method (which was used
to render the template originally) inside the template to render another template:
<?php $names = ['Fabien', ...] ?>
<?php foreach ($names as $name) : ?>
<?= $view->render('hello.php', ['firstname' => $name]) ?>
<?php endforeach ?>
Global Variables¶
Sometimes, you need to set a variable which is available in all templates
rendered by an engine (like the $app
variable when using the Symfony
Framework). These variables can be set by using the
addGlobal()
method and they
can be accessed in the template as normal variables:
$templating->addGlobal('ga_tracking', 'UA-xxxxx-x');
In a template:
1 | <p>The google tracking code is: <?= $ga_tracking ?></p>
|
ご用心
The global variables cannot be called this
or view
, since they are
already used by the PHP engine.
注釈
The global variables can be overridden by a local variable in the template with the same name.
Output Escaping¶
When you render variables, you should probably escape them so that HTML or
JavaScript code isn’t written out to your page. This will prevent things like
XSS attacks. To do this, use the
escape()
method:
<?= $view->escape($firstname) ?>
By default, the escape()
method assumes that the variable is outputted
within an HTML context. The second argument lets you change the context. For
example, to output something inside JavaScript, use the js
context:
<?= $view->escape($var, 'js') ?>
The component comes with an HTML and JS escaper. You can register your own
escaper using the
setEscaper()
method:
$templating->setEscaper('css', function ($value) {
// ... all CSS escaping
return $escapedValue;
});
Helpers¶
The Templating component can be extended via helpers. Helpers are PHP objects that provide features useful in a template context. The component has one built-in helper:
Before you can use these helpers, you need to register them using
set()
:
use Symfony\Component\Templating\Helper\SlotsHelper;
// ...
$templating->set(new SlotsHelper());
Custom Helpers¶
You can create your own helpers by creating a class which implements
HelperInterface
. However,
most of the time you’ll extend
Helper
.
The Helper
has one required method:
getName()
.
This is the name that is used to get the helper from the $view
object.
Creating a Custom Engine¶
Besides providing a PHP templating engine, you can also create your own engine
using the Templating component. To do that, create a new class which
implements the EngineInterface
. This
requires 3 method:
render($name, array $parameters = [])
- Renders a templateexists($name)
- Checks if the template existssupports($name)
- Checks if the given template can be handled by this engine.
Using Multiple Engines¶
It is possible to use multiple engines at the same time using the
DelegatingEngine
class. This class
takes a list of engines and acts just like a normal templating engine. The
only difference is that it delegates the calls to one of the other engines. To
choose which one to use for the template, the
EngineInterface::supports()
method is used:
use Acme\Templating\CustomEngine;
use Symfony\Component\Templating\DelegatingEngine;
use Symfony\Component\Templating\PhpEngine;
$templating = new DelegatingEngine([
new PhpEngine(...),
new CustomEngine(...),
]);