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I'm looking to define my own custom handler in the layout view, much like $this->title() or $this->scripts() so that I can render content in the layout that is supplied by the view.

To be precise, I'd like to display the date of a newspaper edition in a part of the view that's defined in the default.html.php file. In the layout, I'd like to use <?= $this->date(); ?> and then, use something like

<?= $this->html->date('Jan 1, 2013', ['inline' => false]); ?>

in the views/posts/view.html.php file. The lithium\template\view\Renderer class appears to have methods for creating handlers (e.g., Renderer::applyHandler), but I can't seem to get it to work like the built-in handlers, like $this->title() etc. Online documentation says little about customizing the handlers in the Renderer/View classes.

2 Answers 2

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This can be done without subclassing the lithium\template\view\Renderer class. In the media.php bootstrap, use the 'handlers' key with Media::type() to pass a customized handler to the renderer:

    Media::type('html', 'text/html', [
        'view' => 'lithium\template\View',
        'handlers' => ['date' => function($date) use (&$ctx) {
            if (!is_null($date)) {
                $ctx['date'] = $date;
            }
            return $ctx['date'];
        }]
    ]);

Then, $this->date() becomes available in the views and layouts, e.g.:

    //in the default.html.php layout

    echo $this->date(); //value passed from /views/controller/index.html.php

    //in the views/controller/index.html.php

    $this->date(date('Y-m-d'));

As a side note, the $ctx variable is necessary for accessing the rendering context; see the lithium\template\view\Renderer::_init() method for where the 'handlers' array gets merged with the rendering context.

0

This is solved using helpers The documentation under Creating custom helpers should be sufficient.

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  • I'm not sure how helpers accomplish what I'm looking for. In this example, I'm essentially displaying a variable in the layout that is defined in the view. Take $this->html->style('styles', ['inline' => false]) for instance. If you look at this helper method, it's mapping a filename onto the rendering context so that the layout can display the stylesheets defined in the view (not layout) with $this->styles(). These handlers are defined in the Renderer class. I'd like to add custom handlers, and I don't see how the helper classes accomplish this without getting a little hackish... Jun 13, 2013 at 17:26

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