The OpenACS Template System (ATS) is designed to allow developers to cleanly separate application logic from display logic. The intent is to have all of the logic related to manipulating the database and other application state data in one place, and all the logic related to displaying the state of the application in another place. This gives developer's quicker customization and easier upgrades, and also allows developers and graphic designers to work more independently.
In ATS, you write two files for every user-visible page in the
system. One is a plain .tcl
file and the other is a
special .adp
file. The .tcl
file runs a
script that sets up a set of name/value bindings that we call data
sources. These data sources are generally the results of Tcl and/or database queries
or some combination thereof. The template system automatically makes
them available to the .adp
file, or the display part of
the template, which is written in a combination of HTML, special
template related tags, and data source substitutions.
In the overall context of our example OpenACS Notes application, this document will show you how to set up a simple templated page that displays a form to the user for entering new notes into the system. In later sections of the DG, we'll discuss how to develop the pages that actually add notes to the database, how to provide a separate instance of the Notes application to every user and how to design appropriate access control policies for the system.
In order for the Notes application to be useful, we have to allow users to enter data into the database. Typically, this takes two pages: one that displays a form for data entry, and another page that runs the code to update the database and tells the user whether the operation failed. In this document, we will use the template system to build the first of these pages. This isn't a very interesting use of the system since we won't be displaying much data, but we'll cover more on that end later.
The .tcl
file for the form entry template is pretty
simple. Here, the only thing we need from the database is a new ID for
the note object to be inserted. Open up a file called
note-add.tcl
in the ROOT/packages/notes/www
directory, and put the following code in it:
ad_page_contract { Form to add a note in OpenACS Notes. @author Jane Coder @creation-date 11 Oct 2000 } -properties { note_id:onevalue submit_label:onevalue target:onevalue page_title:onevalue } -query { } set user_id [ad_verify_and_get_user_id] db_1row user_name { select first_names || ' ' || last_name as user_name from users where forum_id = :user_id } set page_title "Add a note for $user_name" set submit_label "Add" set target "note-add-2" set note_id [db_nextval acs_object_id_seq] ad_return_template "note-add"
Some things to note about this code:
The procedure ad_page_contract is
always the first thing a .tcl
file calls, if it's under
the www/ directory (i.e. not a Tcl library file). It does validation
of input values from the HTTP request (i.e. form variables) and in
this case, the -properties
clause is used to set up the
data sources that we will ship over to the .adp
part of
the page. In this case, we only use the simplest possible kind of data
source, called a onevalue
, which hold just a single
string value. Later on, we'll see how to use more powerful kinds of
data sources for representing multiple rows from an SQL query. You
also include overall documentation for the page in the contract, and
OpenACS has automatic tools that extract this documentation and make it
browsable.
After being declared in the ad_page_contract
, each
property is just a simple Tcl variable. The template system passes the
final value of the variable to the .adp
template when the
.tcl
file is processed.
The call ad_return_template
tells the template system
what .adp
template page to fetch to display the
properties that have been processed. By default, the template system
will look for a file by the same name as the .tcl
file
that just ran, but with an .adp
extension.
Next we write the corresponding .adp
page. This page
outputs HTML for the form, and also contains placeholders whose values
are substituted in from the properties set up by the .tcl
file. Create a file called note-add.adp
in your editor,
and insert this text:
<master src="master"> <property name="title">@page_title@</property> <property name="context_bar">@context_bar@</property> <form action=@target@> <p>Title: <input type="text" name="title" value=""> </p> <p>Body: <input type="text" name="title" value=""> </p> <p> <center> <input type=submit value="@submit_label@"> </center> </p> </form>
The main point to note here is: when you want to substitute a value
into a page, you put the name of the data source between two "@"
characters. Another point to note is the use of a master template:
Master templates allow you do centralize display code that is used
throughout an application in a single file. In this case, we intend to
have a master template that does the standard page headers and footers
for us - create the master.adp
file, which looks like
this:
<%= [ad_header $title] %> <h2>@title@</h2> <%= [eval ad_context_bar $context_bar] %> <hr> <slave> <br clear="all"> <%= [ad_footer] %>
The main subtlety in this code is the inline Tcl code for running
procs to build the header, footer, context bar, etc. Also, note the
property substitutions that happen here, the values of which are set
up in the <property>
tags in the slave page.
After putting all these files into
ROOT/packages/notes/www
, you should be able to go to
/notes/
URL for your server and see the input form.
Templates separate application logic from display logic by requiring
the developer to write pages in two stages, one file for database
queries and application logic, and another for display. In OpenACS, the
logic part of the page is just a .tcl
that sets up
data sources that are used by the display part of the page. The
display part of the page is an .adp
file with some
special tags and notations for dealing with display logic and
inserting properties into the text of the page. Later on we'll get
into templates more deeply, and show how to use database queries as
data sources.
Templating system documentation