[pyramid] Try "eid" first when retrieving a subresource of ETypeResource
So that Pyramid traversal works as existing CubicWeb URL publishing.
.. -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
.. _templates:
Templates
=========
Templates are the entry point for the |cubicweb| view system. As seen
in :ref:`views_base_class`, there are two kinds of views: the
templatable and non-templatable.
Non-templatable views
---------------------
Non-templatable views are standalone. They are responsible for all the details
such as setting a proper content type (or mime type), the proper document
headers, namespaces, etc. Examples are pure xml views such as RSS or Semantic Web
views (`SIOC`_, `DOAP`_, `FOAF`_, `Linked Data`_, etc.), and views which generate
binary files (pdf, excel files, etc.)
.. _`SIOC`: http://sioc-project.org/
.. _`DOAP`: http://trac.usefulinc.com/doap
.. _`FOAF`: http://www.foaf-project.org/
.. _`Linked Data`: http://linkeddata.org/
To notice that a view is not templatable, you just have to set the
view's class attribute `templatable` to `False`. In this case, it
should set the `content_type` class attribute to the correct MIME
type. By default, it is text/xhtml. Additionally, if your view
generate a binary file, you have to set the view's class attribute
`binary` to `True` too.
Templatable views
-----------------
Templatable views are not concerned with such pesky details. They
leave it to the template. Conversely, the template's main job is to:
* set up the proper document header and content type
* define the general layout of a document
* invoke adequate views in the various sections of the document
Look at :mod:`cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates` and you will find the base
templates used to generate (X)HTML for your application. The most important
template there is :class:`~cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.TheMainTemplate`.
.. _the_main_template_layout:
TheMainTemplate
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. _the_main_template_sections:
Layout and sections
```````````````````
A page is composed as indicated on the schema below :
.. image:: ../../../images/main_template.png
The sections dispatches specific views:
* `header`: the rendering of the header is delegated to the
`htmlheader` view, whose default implementation can be found in
``basetemplates.py`` and which does the following things:
* inject the favicon if there is one
* inject the global style sheets and javascript resources
* call and display a link to an rss component if there is one available
it also sets up the page title, and fills the actual
`header` section with top-level components, using the `header` view, which:
* tries to display a logo, the name of the application and the `breadcrumbs`
* provides a login status area
* provides a login box (hiden by default)
* `left column`: this is filled with all selectable boxes matching the
`left` context (there is also a right column but nowadays it is
seldom used due to bad usability)
* `contentcol`: this is the central column; it is filled with:
* the `rqlinput` view (hidden by default)
* the `applmessages` component
* the `contentheader` view which in turns dispatches all available
content navigation components having the `navtop` context (this
is used to navigate through entities implementing the IPrevNext
interface)
* the view that was given as input to the template's `call`
method, also dealing with pagination concerns
* the `contentfooter`
* `footer`: adds all footer actions
.. note::
How and why a view object is given to the main template is explained
in the :ref:`publisher` chapter.
Configure the main template
```````````````````````````
You can overload some methods of the
:class:`~cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.TheMainTemplate`, in order to fulfil
your needs. There are also some attributes and methods which can be defined on a
view to modify the base template behaviour:
* `paginable`: if the result set is bigger than a configurable size, your result
page will be paginated by default. You can set this attribute to `False` to
avoid this.
* `binary`: boolean flag telling if the view generates some text or a binary
stream. Default to False. When view generates text argument given to `self.w`
**must be a unicode string**, encoded string otherwise.
* `content_type`, view's content type, default to 'text/xhtml'
* `templatable`, boolean flag telling if the view's content should be returned
directly (when `False`) or included in the main template layout (including
header, boxes and so on).
* `page_title()`, method that should return a title that will be set as page
title in the html headers.
* `html_headers()`, method that should return a list of HTML headers to be
included the html headers.
You can also modify certain aspects of the main template of a page
when building a url or setting these parameters in the req.form:
* `__notemplate`, if present (whatever the value assigned), only the content view
is returned
* `__force_display`, if present and its value is not null, no pagination whatever
the number of entities to display (e.g. similar effect as view's `paginable`
attribute described above.
* `__method`, if the result set to render contains only one entity and this
parameter is set, it refers to a method to call on the entity by passing it the
dictionary of the forms parameters, before going the classic way (through step
1 and 2 described juste above)
* `vtitle`, a title to be set as <h1> of the content
Other templates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are also the following other standard templates:
* :class:`cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.LogInTemplate`
* :class:`cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.LogOutTemplate`
* :class:`cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.ErrorTemplate` specializes
:class:`~cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.TheMainTemplate` to do
proper end-user output if an error occurs during the computation of
TheMainTemplate (it is a fallback view).