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@@ -1,518 +0,0 @@
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||||
<part id="getting.started">
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<title>Getting Started</title>
|
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|
||||
<chapter id="what.is.smarty">
|
||||
<title>What is Smarty?</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Smarty is a template engine for PHP. More specifically, it facilitates a
|
||||
manageable way to separate application logic and content from its
|
||||
presentation. This is best described in a situation where the application
|
||||
programmer and the template designer play different roles, or in most cases
|
||||
are not the same person. For example, let's say you are creating a web page
|
||||
that is displaying a newspaper article. The article headline, tagline,
|
||||
author and body are content elements, they contain no information about how
|
||||
they will be presented. They are passed into Smarty by the application,
|
||||
then the template designer edits the templates and uses a combination of
|
||||
HTML tags and template tags to format the presentation of these elements
|
||||
(HTML tables, background colors, font sizes, style sheets, etc.) One day
|
||||
the programmer needs to change the way the article content is retrieved (a
|
||||
change in application logic.) This change does not affect the template
|
||||
designer, the content will still arrive in the template exactly the same.
|
||||
Likewise, if the template designer wants to completely redesign the
|
||||
templates, this requires no changes to the application logic. Therefore,
|
||||
the programmer can make changes to the application logic without the need
|
||||
to restructure templates, and the template designer can make changes to
|
||||
templates without breaking application logic.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
One design goal of Smarty is the separation of business logic and
|
||||
presentation logic. This means templates can certainly contain logic under
|
||||
the condition that it is for presentation only. Things such as including
|
||||
other templates, altering table row colors, upper-casing a variable,
|
||||
looping over an array of data and displaying it, etc. are all examples of
|
||||
presentation logic. This does not mean that Smarty forces a separation of
|
||||
business and presentation logic. Smarty has no knowledge of which is which,
|
||||
so placing business logic in the template is your own doing. Also, if you
|
||||
desire NO logic in your templates you certainly can do so by boiling the
|
||||
content down to text and variables only.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
One of the unique aspects about Smarty is the template compling. This means
|
||||
Smarty reads the template files and creates PHP scripts from them. Once
|
||||
they are created, they are executed from then on. Therefore there is no
|
||||
costly template file parsing for each request, and each template can take
|
||||
full advantage of PHP compiler cache solutions such as Zend Accelerator
|
||||
(http://www.zend.com) or PHP Accelerator
|
||||
(http://www.php-accelerator.co.uk).
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Some of Smarty's features:
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<itemizedlist>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
It is extremely fast.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
It is efficient since the PHP parser does the dirty work.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
No template parsing overhead, only compiles once.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
It is smart about recompiling only the template files that have changed.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
You can make <link linkend="language.custom.functions">custom functions</link>
|
||||
and custom <link linkend="language.modifiers">variable modifiers</link>, so the
|
||||
template language is extremely extensible.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Configurable template delimiter tag syntax, so you can use
|
||||
{}, {{}}, <!--{}-->, etc.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
The if/elseif/else/endif constructs are passed to the
|
||||
PHP parser, so the {if ...} expression syntax can be as simple or as complex
|
||||
as you like.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Unlimited nesting of sections, ifs, etc. allowed.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
It is possible to embed PHP code right in your template files,
|
||||
although this may not be needed (nor recommended)
|
||||
since the engine is so customizable.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Built-in caching support
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Arbitrary template sources
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Custom cache handling functions
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
<listitem>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Plugin architecture
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</listitem>
|
||||
</itemizedlist>
|
||||
</chapter>
|
||||
<chapter id="installation">
|
||||
<title>Installation</title>
|
||||
|
||||
<sect1 id="installation.requirements">
|
||||
<title>Requirements</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Smarty requires a web server running PHP 4.0.6 or later.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</sect1>
|
||||
|
||||
<sect1 id="installing.smarty.basic">
|
||||
<title>Basic Installation</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Install the Smarty library files which are in the /libs/ directory of
|
||||
the distribution. These are the PHP files that you SHOULD NOT edit. They
|
||||
are shared among all applications and they only get updated when you
|
||||
upgrade to a new version of Smarty.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Smarty library files</title>
|
||||
<screen>
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
Smarty.class.php
|
||||
Smarty_Compiler.class.php
|
||||
Config_File.class.php
|
||||
debug.tpl
|
||||
/core/*.php (all of them)
|
||||
/plugins/*.php (all of them)
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</screen>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Smarty uses a PHP constant named <link
|
||||
linkend="constant.smarty.dir">SMARTY_DIR</link> which is the system
|
||||
filepath Smarty library directory. Basically, if your application can find
|
||||
the <emphasis>Smarty.class.php</emphasis> file, you do not need to set
|
||||
SMARTY_DIR, Smarty will figure it out on its own. Therefore, if
|
||||
<emphasis>Smarty.class.php</emphasis> is not in your include_path, or you
|
||||
do not supply an absolute path to it in your application, then you must
|
||||
define SMARTY_DIR manually. SMARTY_DIR <emphasis>must</emphasis> include a
|
||||
trailing slash.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Here is how you create an instance of Smarty in your PHP scripts:
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Create Smarty instance of Smarty</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
require('Smarty.class.php');
|
||||
$smarty = new Smarty;
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Try running the above script. If you get an error saying the
|
||||
<emphasis>Smarty.class.php</emphasis> file could not be found, you have to
|
||||
do one of the following:
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Supply absolute path to library file</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
require('/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/Smarty.class.php');
|
||||
$smarty = new Smarty;
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Add library directory to php_include path</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
// Edit your php.ini file, add the Smarty library
|
||||
// directory to the include_path and restart web server.
|
||||
// Then the following should work:
|
||||
require('Smarty.class.php');
|
||||
$smarty = new Smarty;
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Set SMARTY_DIR constant manually</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
define('SMARTY_DIR', '/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/');
|
||||
require(SMARTY_DIR . 'Smarty.class.php');
|
||||
$smarty = new Smarty;
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Now that the library files are in place, it's time to setup the Smarty
|
||||
directories for your application. Smarty requires four directories which
|
||||
are (by default) named <emphasis>templates</emphasis>,
|
||||
<emphasis>templates_c</emphasis>, <emphasis>configs</emphasis> and
|
||||
<emphasis>cache</emphasis>. Each of these are definable by the Smarty class
|
||||
properties <emphasis>$template_dir</emphasis>,
|
||||
<emphasis>$compile_dir</emphasis>, <emphasis>$config_dir</emphasis>, and
|
||||
<emphasis>$cache_dir</emphasis> respectively. It is highly recommended
|
||||
that you setup a separate set of these directories for each application
|
||||
that will use Smarty.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Be sure you know the location of your web server document root. In our
|
||||
example, the document root is "/web/www.mydomain.com/docs/". The Smarty
|
||||
directories are only accessed by the Smarty library and never accessed
|
||||
directly by the web browser. Therefore to avoid any security concerns, it
|
||||
is recommended to place these directories <emphasis>outside</emphasis> of
|
||||
the document root.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
For our installation example, we will be setting up the Smarty environment
|
||||
for a guest book application. We picked an application only for the purpose
|
||||
of a directory naming convention. You can use the same environment for any
|
||||
application, just replace "guestbook" with the name of your app. We'll
|
||||
place our Smarty directories under
|
||||
"/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/".
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
You will need as least one file under your document root, and that is the
|
||||
script accessed by the web browser. We will call our script "index.php",
|
||||
and place it in a subdirectory under the document root called
|
||||
"/guestbook/".
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<note>
|
||||
<title>Technical Note</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
It is convenient to setup the web server so that "index.php" can be
|
||||
identified as the default directory index, so if you access
|
||||
"http://www.mydomain.com/guestbook/", the index.php script will be executed
|
||||
without "index.php" in the URL. In Apache you can set this up by adding
|
||||
"index.php" onto the end of your DirectoryIndex setting (separate each
|
||||
entry with a space.)
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</note>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Lets take a look at the file structure so far:
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Example file structure</title>
|
||||
<screen>
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/Smarty.class.php
|
||||
/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/Smarty_Compiler.class.php
|
||||
/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/Config_File.class.php
|
||||
/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/debug.tpl
|
||||
/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/core/*.php
|
||||
/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty/plugins/*.php
|
||||
|
||||
/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates/
|
||||
/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates_c/
|
||||
/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/configs/
|
||||
/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/cache/
|
||||
|
||||
/web/www.mydomain.com/docs/guestbook/index.php
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</screen>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Smarty will need write access to the <emphasis>$compile_dir</emphasis> and
|
||||
<emphasis>$cache_dir</emphasis>, so be sure the web server user can write
|
||||
to them. This is usually user "nobody" and group "nobody". For OS X users,
|
||||
the default is user "www" and group "www". If you are using Apache, you can
|
||||
look in your httpd.conf file (usually in "/usr/local/apache/conf/") to see
|
||||
what user and group are being used.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Setting file permissions</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="shell">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
chown nobody:nobody /web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates_c/
|
||||
chmod 770 /web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates_c/
|
||||
|
||||
chown nobody:nobody /web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/cache/
|
||||
chmod 770 /web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/cache/
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<note>
|
||||
<title>Technical Note</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
chmod 770 will be fairly tight security, it only allows user "nobody" and
|
||||
group "nobody" read/write access to the directories. If you would like to
|
||||
open up read access to anyone (mostly for your own convenience of viewing
|
||||
these files), you can use 775 instead.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</note>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
We need to create the index.tpl file that Smarty will load. This will be
|
||||
located in your $template_dir.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Editing /web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates/index.tpl</title>
|
||||
<screen>
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
|
||||
{* Smarty *}
|
||||
|
||||
Hello, {$name}!
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</screen>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<note>
|
||||
<title>Technical Note</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
{* Smarty *} is a template comment. It is not required, but it is good
|
||||
practice to start all your template files with this comment. It makes
|
||||
the file easy to recognize regardless of the file extension. For
|
||||
example, text editors could recognize the file and turn on special
|
||||
syntax highlighting.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</note>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Now lets edit index.php. We'll create an instance of Smarty, assign a
|
||||
template variable and display the index.tpl file. In our example
|
||||
environment, "/usr/local/lib/php/Smarty" is in our include_path. Be sure you
|
||||
do the same, or use absolute paths.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Editing /web/www.mydomain.com/docs/guestbook/index.php</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
|
||||
// load Smarty library
|
||||
require('Smarty.class.php');
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty = new Smarty;
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty->template_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates/';
|
||||
$smarty->compile_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates_c/';
|
||||
$smarty->config_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/configs/';
|
||||
$smarty->cache_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/cache/';
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty->assign('name','Ned');
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty->display('index.tpl');
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<note>
|
||||
<title>Technical Note</title>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
In our example, we are setting absolute paths to all of the Smarty
|
||||
directories. If '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/' is within your
|
||||
PHP include_path, then these settings are not necessary. However, it is
|
||||
more efficient and (from experience) less error-prone to set them to
|
||||
absolute paths. This ensures that Smarty is getting files from the
|
||||
directories you intended.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</note>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Now load the index.php file from your web browser. You should see "Hello,
|
||||
Ned!"
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
You have completed the basic setup for Smarty!
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
</sect1>
|
||||
<sect1 id="installing.smarty.extended">
|
||||
<title>Extended Setup</title>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
This is a continuation of the <link
|
||||
linkend="installing.smarty.basic">basic installation</link>, please read
|
||||
that first!
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
A slightly more flexible way to setup Smarty is to extend the class and
|
||||
initialize your Smarty environment. So instead of repeatedly setting
|
||||
directory paths, assigning the same vars, etc., we can do that in one place.
|
||||
Lets create a new directory "/php/includes/guestbook/" and make a new file
|
||||
called "setup.php". In our example environment, "/php/includes" is in our
|
||||
include_path. Be sure you set this up too, or use absolute file paths.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Editing /php/includes/guestbook/setup.php</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
|
||||
// load Smarty library
|
||||
require('Smarty.class.php');
|
||||
|
||||
// The setup.php file is a good place to load
|
||||
// required application library files, and you
|
||||
// can do that right here. An example:
|
||||
// require('guestbook/guestbook.lib.php');
|
||||
|
||||
class Smarty_GuestBook extends Smarty {
|
||||
|
||||
function Smarty_GuestBook() {
|
||||
|
||||
// Class Constructor. These automatically get set with each new instance.
|
||||
|
||||
$this->Smarty();
|
||||
|
||||
$this->template_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates/';
|
||||
$this->compile_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/templates_c/';
|
||||
$this->config_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/configs/';
|
||||
$this->cache_dir = '/web/www.mydomain.com/smarty/guestbook/cache/';
|
||||
|
||||
$this->caching = true;
|
||||
$this->assign('app_name','Guest Book');
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
}
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Now lets alter the index.php file to use setup.php:
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
<example>
|
||||
<title>Editing /web/www.mydomain.com/docs/guestbook/index.php</title>
|
||||
<programlisting role="php">
|
||||
<![CDATA[
|
||||
<?php
|
||||
|
||||
require('guestbook/setup.php');
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty = new Smarty_GuestBook;
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty->assign('name','Ned');
|
||||
|
||||
$smarty->display('index.tpl');
|
||||
?>
|
||||
]]>
|
||||
</programlisting>
|
||||
</example>
|
||||
|
||||
<para>
|
||||
Now you see it is quite simple to bring up an instance of Smarty, just use
|
||||
Smarty_GuestBook which automatically initializes everything for our application.
|
||||
</para>
|
||||
|
||||
</sect1>
|
||||
|
||||
</chapter>
|
||||
</part>
|
||||
|
||||
<!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
|
||||
Local variables:
|
||||
mode: sgml
|
||||
sgml-omittag:t
|
||||
sgml-shorttag:t
|
||||
sgml-minimize-attributes:nil
|
||||
sgml-always-quote-attributes:t
|
||||
sgml-indent-step:1
|
||||
sgml-indent-data:t
|
||||
indent-tabs-mode:nil
|
||||
sgml-parent-document:nil
|
||||
sgml-default-dtd-file:"../../../../manual.ced"
|
||||
sgml-exposed-tags:nil
|
||||
sgml-local-catalogs:nil
|
||||
sgml-local-ecat-files:nil
|
||||
End:
|
||||
vim600: syn=xml fen fdm=syntax fdl=2 si
|
||||
vim: et tw=78 syn=sgml
|
||||
vi: ts=1 sw=1
|
||||
-->
|
Reference in New Issue
Block a user