Skin Templates
The framework used to render output.
Overview
Skin Templates are plain text with embedded
template directives,
macros and
tokens that are expanded by
Foswiki to build an output page, usually HTML.
(If you are looking for the template used as 'starter text' for new topics. see
TemplateTopics.)
Skin templates are used when composing the output from all actions, such as
view, edit, and preview. By sharing common template definitions between all
these actions, it makes it easy to change the look and feel of all
pages by editing just a few templates.
Skin templates are either stored as text files with the extension
.tmpl
in the
templates/
directory, or in Foswiki topics.
Template directives are expanded when the template is loaded, and are
used to define the general structure of the output.
Macros and Template
Tokens are expanded when the page is rendered, and fill in page-specific
information.
Note that
Macros and
Tokens are written using the same syntax.
See
Macros for more information on macros.
Tokens look exactly like Macros, but they are specific for the script
expanding the template, and cannot be used elsewhere in Foswiki. See
SkinTemplateTokens for more information on tokens.
How Template Directives Work
Template directives look a lot like standard
macros.
-
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"file"}%
includes a template file. The file is found as described below.
-
%TMPL:DEF{"name"}%
defines a block. All text between this and the next %TMPL:END%
directive is removed and saved for later use with %TMPL:P%
.
-
%TMPL:END%
ends a block definition.
-
%TMPL:PREV%
: returns the previous definition of the block being defined.
-
%TMPL:P{"name"}%
includes a previously defined block.
-
%{...}%
is a comment. Whitespace either side of the comment (newlines, spaces, tabs etc) is treated as part of the comment, and removed when the comment is removed.
You can use a block before
or after declaring it. If you define the same
block twice, only the second definition is used.
Most template directives work only for templates: they do not get processed in normal topic text. The one exception is
%TMPL:P
.
Parameters to blocks
%TMPL:DEF%
and
%TMPL:P%
support simple parameters.
Parameters are only available in the immediate definition being included; they
are not passed on to any other
TMPL:P
inside the
TMPL:DEF
being expanded
unless they are passed on explicitly in a new parameter.
Block parameters
For example, we can define a parameter
P
inside a block:
%TMPL:DEF{"x"}% x%P%z %TMPL:END%
then pass a value to that parameter:
%TMPL:P{"x" P="y"}%
This will expand to
xyz
.
Block definition parameters
Default parameter values can be set in the definition:
%TMPL:DEF{"x" y="1"}% x%y%z %TMPL:END%
then
%TMPL:P{"x"}%
will expand to
x1z
.
You can also use a parameter inside a default parameter:
%TMPL:DEF{"x" y="%value%"}% x%y%z %TMPL:END%
then
%TMPL:P{"x" value="1000"}%
will expand to
x1000z
.
Naming
Any alphanumeric characters can be used in parameter names.
TMPL:P
parameters
override any other possible definition of the name, so you should not use
parameter names that might clash with
Macros.
Conditional expansion
Using context identifiers
Three parameter names,
context
,
then
and
else
are
reserved.
They are used to support a limited form of "if" condition that you can use to select which of two
TMPL:DEF
to expand, based on a
context identifier:
%TMPL:DEF{"link_inactive"}%<input type="button" disabled value="Link>%TMPL:END%
%TMPL:DEF{"link_active"}%<input type="button" onclick="link()" value="Link" />%TMPL:END%
%TMPL:P{context="inactive" then="link_inactive" else="link_active"}% for %CONTEXT%
When the
inactive
context is set, then this will expand the
link_inactive
TMPL:DEF
; otherwise it will expand
link_active
.
This style of conditional expansion is used in preference to the
%IF{}
macro where possible because it is much more efficient.
See
If Statements: Context identifiers for details of supported context identifiers.
Using parameters
The mechanism to pass parameters to blocks can be used to conditionally call different template blocks. For example:
%TMPL:DEF{"conditional" tmpl="default"}%
%TMPL:P{"%tmpl%"}%
%TMPL:END%
%TMPL:DEF{"default"}%
This is a default template.
%TMPL:END%
%TMPL:DEF{"special"}%
This is a special template.
%TMPL:END%
...
%TMPL:P{"conditional" tmpl="special"}%
TMPL:INCLUDE
recursion
You can use recursion with
%TMPL:INCLUDE%
for piecewise customisation, or
mixing in new features.
If there is a recursion in the
%TMPL:INCLUDE%
chain (eg.
view.tmpl
contains
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"view"}%
), the templating system will detect that you
are trying to include the same template again, and will instead include the
next version of the template of that name that it finds in the
template path.
For example, say you
only want to override the breadcrumbs for the view
script. You could create a tempate called
view.crumbless.tmpl
:
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"view"}%
%TMPL:DEF{"breadcrumb"}% We don't want any crumbs %TMPL:END%
and then
* Set SKIN=crumbless,pattern
Remember: the template path contains the most specific template first.
Comments
%{...}%
are removed from the templates as soon as the file is
read, before any other template macros are evaluated. Whitespace either side
of the comment (newlines, spaces, tabs etc) is also removed.
Finding Skin Templates
Most skin templates are stored in
.tmpl
files in the
templates
directory.
For example,
templates/view.tmpl
is the default skin template file for
the
bin/view
script. You can also save skin templates in user topics.
The
{TemplatePath}
configuration setting (in the Miscellaneous section of
the
configure page) defines which directories,
files and Foswiki topics will be recognised as containing templates.
Skin templates that are loaded using
%TMPL:INCLUDE
with an explicit
.tmpl
extension are looked for
only in the
templates/
directory. For instance
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"example.tmpl"}%
will only return
templates/example.tmpl
,
regardless of
{TemplatePath}
and
SKIN
settings.
All other templates are searched for using the
{TemplatePath}
. This is a
list of generic name patterns, each of which contains the placeholders
$name
(the template name),
$web
(the web), and
$skin
(the skin),
each standing in for part of the name. Each entry in this list is expanded
in turn until the template is found.
The rules defined by the out-of-the-box setting of
{TemplatePath}
are:
-
templates/$web/$name.$skin.tmpl
-
templates/$name.$skin.tmpl
-
$web.$skinSkin$nameTemplate
-
System.$skinSkin$nameTemplate
-
templates/$web/$name.tmpl
-
templates/$name.tmpl
-
$web.$nameTemplate
-
System.$nameTemplate
For example, let's say we are viewing a topic in web
Sandbox
and are searching for the template called
function
. The skin path is set to
custom,pattern
. The following locations will be considered in turn, until a template is found:
-
templates/Sandbox/function.custom.tmpl
(rule 1)
-
templates/Sandbox/function.pattern.tmpl
(rule 1)
-
templates/function.custom.tmpl
(rule 2)
-
templates/function.pattern.tmpl
(rule 2)
-
Sandbox.CustomSkinFunctionTemplate
(rule 3)
-
Sandbox.PatternSkinFunctionTemplate
(rule 3)
-
System.CustomSkinFunctionTemplate
(rule 4)
-
System.PatternSkinFunctionTemplate
(rule 4)
-
templates/Sandbox/function.tmpl
(rule 5)
-
templates/function.tmpl
(rule 6)
-
Sandbox.FunctionTemplate
(rule 7)
-
System.FunctionTemplate
(rule 8)
This usage is supported
for compatibility only and is
deprecated. Store web-specific templates in topics instead.
When a skin name or template name is used to build a topic name, the first character is automatically capitalised.
The
skin path is set as described in
Skins.
Template file names are usually derived from the name of the currently executing script; however it is also possible to override these settings in the
view
and
edit
scripts, for example when a topic-specific template is required. Two
preference settings can be used to override the skin templates used:
-
VIEW_TEMPLATE
sets the template to be used for viewing a topic.
-
EDIT_TEMPLATE
sets the template for editing a topic.
If these preferences are set
then the indicated templates will be chosen for
view
and
edit
respectively. The template search order remains as specified above.
Note that the topic name specified as a template may need to be fully qualified with Web and SubWeb. E.g.
* Set VIEW_TEMPLATE = Web/SubWeb.SpecificViewTemplate
Also the qualification needs to be given in the form Web/SubWeb.TopicTemplate as in the example; Web/SubWeb/TopicTemplate does not work.
Security and usability
Setting the
{TemplatePath}
is a compromise between the often
opposing goals of security and usability. From a security perspective,
allowing templates to be loaded from topics might open a door to people
who want to inject their own evil HTML in those topics. From a usability
perspective, it's very desireable to be able to override templates from topics,
as it vastly increases the range of wiki applications.
The default
{TemplatePath}
comes down on the side of usability, by allowing
templates from topics to be found before templates from the (more secure)
templates
directory. If you are particularly security concious, you may
want to
reverse this order, so that templates in
templates/
are always
found before those in topics. You can do this by simply moving rules
3 and 7 to the end of the list.
Note that topics containing templates are checked for VIEW access using the
normal
Foswiki access controls. Any access control failure
is silently ignored, and the template path expansion continues.
Developing new templates
Debugging
When writing new templates, it can sometimes it can be hard to work out
where different parts of the generated output come from. To help you debug
your new templates, the
Foswiki::Templates
module has a "trace" mode. In
this mode, the HTML source created is annotated with HTML comments that are wrapped around the output generated by each template, as it is expanded. For example, when trace mode is off,
%TMPL:DEF{"x:y"}% de %TMPL:END%
blah %TMPL:P{"x:y"}% blah
will expand to:
blah de blah
With tracing enabled, the HTML source will look like:
blah <!--x:y--> de <!--/x:y--> blah
To enable the trace mode, edit
lib/Foswiki/Templates.pm
in your
installation and change
use constant TRACE => 0
to
use constant TRACE => 1
.
Note that the trace annotations may make your output look strange. However
you can usually "view source" in the browser to see what was generated (or
you may be able to run the script from the command-line e.g.
cd bin; perl -T -I . view topic=MyWeb.MyTopic skin=mynewskin
).
Don't forget to switch the trace mode off again when you are finished!
Overview of the default templates
Finally, here's a very high-level overview of the default
templates. These templates are rarely used on their own, but are used as
the base on which skins, such as
PatternSkin, are built.
foswiki.tmpl
is the default master template. The main purpose of this
template is to instantiate the following blocks:
-
htmldoctype
- start of all HTML pages
-
bodystart
- start of the body tag
-
main
- page content
-
bodyend
- end of the page
Default definitions are provided for each of these blocks.
foswiki.tmpl
is never used on its own, but is frequently included by other templates.
Next, there are a number of action-specific templates, such as
view.tmpl
,
edit.tmpl
,
login.tmpl
. These are the templates loaded by the actions of
the same name. Their purpose is to include
foswiki.tmpl
, and provide new,
page-specific, definitions of the blocks described above.
Several of the action-specific templates have
skinned versions, such as
view.print.tmpl
and
view.text.tmpl
. These skinned versions are used to view the page in a specific way - for printing, or as plain text, for example.
messages.tmpl
is an important template; it provides the basic definitions of
all error and warning messages that Foswiki issues. These are defined using
the
%MAKETEXT
macro to simplify translation into different languages.
attachtables.tmpl
is another template worthy of separate mention. This
template defines the different parts of the page that are involved in
displaying tables of attachments. The blocks defined in this template are
instantiated directly from code, rather than via
%TMPL:P
.
The remainder of the templates are used for varying purposes; their names,
or introductory comments, should clarify.
A skin can provide a new version of any or all of these templates, depending
on the depth of customisation. See the template files named
*.pattern.*
to
see what
PatternSkin defines.
Related Topics: Skins Macros JavascriptFiles