From: Fabien Potencier Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2012 14:30:18 +0000 (+0100) Subject: added two new recipes X-Git-Url: http://git.silmor.de/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=0505c2fefd5eaa81c628b0cf8a9b8a2bc612321c;p=web%2Fkonrad%2Ftwig.git added two new recipes --- diff --git a/doc/recipes.rst b/doc/recipes.rst index 41540f2..6ece40d 100644 --- a/doc/recipes.rst +++ b/doc/recipes.rst @@ -365,4 +365,110 @@ stylesheets, here is how you can configure Twig:: 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