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Directives: Output
==================
#echo
-----
The template:
::
Here is my #echo ', '.join(['silly']*5) # example
The output:
::
Here is my silly, silly, silly, silly, silly example
The generated code:
::
write('Here is my ')
write(filter(', '.join(['silly']*5) ))
write(' example\n')
#silent
-------
The template:
::
Here is my #silent ', '.join(['silly']*5) # example
The output:
::
Here is my example
The generated code:
::
write('Here is my ')
', '.join(['silly']*5)
write(' example\n')
OK, it's not quite covert because that extra space gives it away,
but it almost succeeds.
#raw
----
The template:
::
Text before raw.
#raw
Text in raw. $alligator. $croc.o['dile']. #set $a = $b + $c.
#end raw
Text after raw.
The output:
::
Text before raw.
Text in raw. $alligator. $croc.o['dile']. #set $a = $b + $c.
Text after raw.
The generated code:
::
write('''Text before raw.
Text in raw. $alligator. $croc.o['dile']. #set $a = $b + $c.
Text after raw.
''')
So we see that {#raw} is really like a quoting mechanism. It says
that anything inside it is ordinary text, and Cheetah joins a
{#raw} section with adjacent string literals rather than generating
a separate {write} call.
#include
--------
The main template:
::
#include "y.tmpl"
The included template y.tmpl:
::
Let's go $voom!
The shell command and output:
::
% voom="VOOM" x.py --env
Let's go VOOM!
The generated code:
::
write(self._includeCheetahSource("y.tmpl", trans=trans, includeFrom="file",
raw=0))
#include raw
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The main template:
::
#include raw "y.tmpl"
The shell command and output:
::
% voom="VOOM" x.py --env
Let's go $voom!
The generated code:
::
write(self._includeCheetahSource("y.tmpl", trans=trans, includeFrom="fil
e", raw=1))
That last argument, {raw}, makes the difference.
#include from a string or expression (eval)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The template:
::
#attr $y = "Let's go $voom!"
#include source=$y
#include raw source=$y
#include source="Bam! Bam!"
The output:
::
% voom="VOOM" x.py --env
Let's go VOOM!Let's go $voom!Bam! Bam!
The generated code:
::
write(self._includeCheetahSource(VFS(SL,"y",1), trans=trans,
includeFrom="str", raw=0, includeID="481020889808.74"))
write(self._includeCheetahSource(VFS(SL,"y",1), trans=trans,
includeFrom="str", raw=1, includeID="711020889808.75"))
write(self._includeCheetahSource("Bam! Bam!", trans=trans,
includeFrom="str", raw=0, includeID="1001020889808.75"))
Later in the generated class:
::
y = "Let's go $voom!"
#slurp
------
The template:
::
#for $i in range(5)
$i
#end for
#for $i in range(5)
$i #slurp
#end for
Line after slurp.
The output:
::
0
1
2
3
4
0 1 2 3 4 Line after slurp.
The generated code:
::
for i in range(5):
write(filter(i)) # generated from '$i' at line 2, col 1.
write('\n')
for i in range(5):
write(filter(i)) # generated from '$i' at line 5, col 1.
write(' ')
write('Line after slurp.\n')
The space after each number is because of the space before {#slurp}
in the template definition.
#filter
-------
The template:
::
#attr $ode = ">> Rubber Ducky, you're the one! You make bathtime so much fun! <<"
$ode
#filter WebSafe
$ode
#filter MaxLen
${ode, maxlen=13}
#filter None
${ode, maxlen=13}
The output:
::
>> Rubber Ducky, you're the one! You make bathtime so much fun! <<
>> Rubber Ducky, you're the one! You make bathtime so much fun! <<
>> Rubber Duc
>> Rubber Ducky, you're the one! You make bathtime so much fun! <<
The {WebSafe} filter escapes characters that have a special meaning
in HTML. The {MaxLen} filter chops off values at the specified
length. {#filter None} returns to the default filter, which ignores
the {maxlen} argument.
The generated code:
::
1 write(filter(VFS(SL,"ode",1))) # generated from '$ode' at line 2, col 1.
2 write('\n')
3 filterName = 'WebSafe'
4 if "WebSafe" in self._filters:
5 filter = self._currentFilter = self._filters[filterName]
6 else:
7 filter = self._currentFilter = \
8 self._filters[filterName] = getattr(self._filtersLib,
filterName)(self).filter
9 write(filter(VFS(SL,"ode",1))) # generated from '$ode' at line 4, col 1.
10 write('\n')
11 filterName = 'MaxLen'
12 if "MaxLen" in self._filters:
13 filter = self._currentFilter = self._filters[filterName]
14 else:
15 filter = self._currentFilter = \
16 self._filters[filterName] = getattr(self._filtersLib,
filterName)(self).filter
17 write(filter(VFS(SL,"ode",1), maxlen=13)) # generated from
#'${ode, maxlen=13}' at line 6, col 1.
18 write('\n')
19 filter = self._initialFilter
20 write(filter(VFS(SL,"ode",1), maxlen=13)) # generated from
#'${ode, maxlen=13}' at line 8, col 1.
21 write('\n')
As we've seen many times, Cheetah wraps all placeholder lookups in
a {filter} call. (This also applies to non-searchList lookups:
local, global and builtin variables.) The {filter} "function" is
actually an alias to the current filter object:
::
filter = self._currentFilter
as set at the top of the main method. Here in lines 3-8 and 11-16
we see the filter being changed. Whoops, I lied. {filter} is not an
alias to the filter object itself but to that object's {.filter}
method. Line 19 switches back to the default filter.
In line 17 we see the {maxlen} argument being passed as a keyword
argument to {filter} (not to {VFS}). In line 20 the same thing
happens although the default filter ignores the argument.
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