/** * @class Ext.XTemplate * @extends Ext.Template *

A template class that supports advanced functionality like autofilling arrays, conditional processing with * basic comparison operators, sub-templates, basic math function support, special built-in template variables, * inline code execution and more. XTemplate also provides the templating mechanism built into {@link Ext.DataView}.

*

XTemplate supports many special tags and built-in operators that aren't defined as part of the API, but are * supported in the templates that can be created. The following examples demonstrate all of the supported features. * This is the data object used for reference in each code example:

*

var data = {
    name: 'Jack Slocum',
    title: 'Lead Developer',
    company: 'Ext JS, LLC',
    email: 'jack@extjs.com',
    address: '4 Red Bulls Drive',
    city: 'Cleveland',
    state: 'Ohio',
    zip: '44102',
    drinks: ['Red Bull', 'Coffee', 'Water'],
    kids: [{
        name: 'Sara Grace',
        age:3
    },{
        name: 'Zachary',
        age:2
    },{
        name: 'John James',
        age:0
    }]
};
 * 
*

Auto filling of arrays
The tpl tag and the for operator are used * to process the provided data object. If for="." is specified, the data object provided * is examined. If the variable in for is an array, it will auto-fill, repeating the template * block inside the tpl tag for each item in the array:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for=".">',
        '<p>{name}</p>',
    '</tpl></p>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data.kids); // pass the kids property of the data object
 * 
*

Scope switching
The for property can be leveraged to access specified members * of the provided data object to populate the template:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Name: {name}</p>',
    '<p>Title: {title}</p>',
    '<p>Company: {company}</p>',
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for="kids">', // interrogate the kids property within the data
        '<p>{name}</p>',
    '</tpl></p>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
 * 
*

Access to parent object from within sub-template scope
When processing a sub-template, for example while * looping through a child array, you can access the parent object's members via the parent object:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Name: {name}</p>',
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for="kids">',
        '<tpl if="age &gt; 1">',  // <-- Note that the > is encoded
            '<p>{name}</p>',
            '<p>Dad: {parent.name}</p>',
        '</tpl>',
    '</tpl></p>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
*

Array item index and basic math support
While processing an array, the special variable {#} * will provide the current array index + 1 (starts at 1, not 0). Templates also support the basic math operators * + - * and / that can be applied directly on numeric data values:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Name: {name}</p>',
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for="kids">',
        '<tpl if="age &gt; 1">',  // <-- Note that the > is encoded
            '<p>{#}: {name}</p>',  // <-- Auto-number each item
            '<p>In 5 Years: {age+5}</p>',  // <-- Basic math
            '<p>Dad: {parent.name}</p>',
        '</tpl>',
    '</tpl></p>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
*

Auto-rendering of flat arrays
Flat arrays that contain values (and not objects) can be auto-rendered * using the special {.} variable inside a loop. This variable will represent the value of * the array at the current index:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>{name}\'s favorite beverages:</p>',
    '<tpl for="drinks">',
       '<div> - {.}</div>',
    '</tpl>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
*

Basic conditional logic
Using the tpl tag and the if * operator you can provide conditional checks for deciding whether or not to render specific parts of the template. * Note that there is no else operator — if needed, you should use two opposite if statements. * Properly-encoded attributes are required as seen in the following example:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Name: {name}</p>',
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for="kids">',
        '<tpl if="age &gt; 1">',  // <-- Note that the > is encoded
            '<p>{name}</p>',
        '</tpl>',
    '</tpl></p>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
*

Ability to execute arbitrary inline code
In an XTemplate, anything between {[ ... ]} is considered * code to be executed in the scope of the template. There are some special variables available in that code: *

* This example demonstrates basic row striping using an inline code block and the xindex variable:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Name: {name}</p>',
    '<p>Company: {[values.company.toUpperCase() + ", " + values.title]}</p>',
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for="kids">',
       '<div class="{[xindex % 2 === 0 ? "even" : "odd"]}">',
        '{name}',
        '</div>',
    '</tpl></p>'
);
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
*

Template member functions
One or more member functions can be defined directly on the config * object passed into the XTemplate constructor for more complex processing:

*

var tpl = new Ext.XTemplate(
    '<p>Name: {name}</p>',
    '<p>Kids: ',
    '<tpl for="kids">',
        '<tpl if="this.isGirl(name)">',
            '<p>Girl: {name} - {age}</p>',
        '</tpl>',
        '<tpl if="this.isGirl(name) == false">',
            '<p>Boy: {name} - {age}</p>',
        '</tpl>',
        '<tpl if="this.isBaby(age)">',
            '<p>{name} is a baby!</p>',
        '</tpl>',
    '</tpl></p>', {
     isGirl: function(name){
         return name == 'Sara Grace';
     },
     isBaby: function(age){
        return age < 1;
     }
});
tpl.overwrite(panel.body, data);
* @constructor * @param {String/Array/Object} parts The HTML fragment or an array of fragments to join(""), or multiple arguments * to join("") that can also include a config object */ Ext.XTemplate = function(){ Ext.XTemplate.superclass.constructor.apply(this, arguments); var me = this, s = me.html, re = /]*>((?:(?=([^<]+))\2|<(?!tpl\b[^>]*>))*?)<\/tpl>/, nameRe = /^]*?for="(.*?)"/, ifRe = /^]*?if="(.*?)"/, execRe = /^]*?exec="(.*?)"/, m, id = 0, tpls = [], VALUES = 'values', PARENT = 'parent', XINDEX = 'xindex', XCOUNT = 'xcount', RETURN = 'return ', WITHVALUES = 'with(values){ '; s = ['', s, ''].join(''); while((m = s.match(re))){ var m2 = m[0].match(nameRe), m3 = m[0].match(ifRe), m4 = m[0].match(execRe), exp = null, fn = null, exec = null, name = m2 && m2[1] ? m2[1] : ''; if (m3) { exp = m3 && m3[1] ? m3[1] : null; if(exp){ fn = new Function(VALUES, PARENT, XINDEX, XCOUNT, WITHVALUES + RETURN +(Ext.util.Format.htmlDecode(exp))+'; }'); } } if (m4) { exp = m4 && m4[1] ? m4[1] : null; if(exp){ exec = new Function(VALUES, PARENT, XINDEX, XCOUNT, WITHVALUES +(Ext.util.Format.htmlDecode(exp))+'; }'); } } if(name){ switch(name){ case '.': name = new Function(VALUES, PARENT, WITHVALUES + RETURN + VALUES + '; }'); break; case '..': name = new Function(VALUES, PARENT, WITHVALUES + RETURN + PARENT + '; }'); break; default: name = new Function(VALUES, PARENT, WITHVALUES + RETURN + name + '; }'); } } tpls.push({ id: id, target: name, exec: exec, test: fn, body: m[1]||'' }); s = s.replace(m[0], '{xtpl'+ id + '}'); ++id; } Ext.each(tpls, function(t) { me.compileTpl(t); }); me.master = tpls[tpls.length-1]; me.tpls = tpls; }; Ext.extend(Ext.XTemplate, Ext.Template, { // private re : /\{([\w-\.\#]+)(?:\:([\w\.]*)(?:\((.*?)?\))?)?(\s?[\+\-\*\\]\s?[\d\.\+\-\*\\\(\)]+)?\}/g, // private codeRe : /\{\[((?:\\\]|.|\n)*?)\]\}/g, // private applySubTemplate : function(id, values, parent, xindex, xcount){ var me = this, len, t = me.tpls[id], vs, buf = []; if ((t.test && !t.test.call(me, values, parent, xindex, xcount)) || (t.exec && t.exec.call(me, values, parent, xindex, xcount))) { return ''; } vs = t.target ? t.target.call(me, values, parent) : values; len = vs.length; parent = t.target ? values : parent; if(t.target && Ext.isArray(vs)){ Ext.each(vs, function(v, i) { buf[buf.length] = t.compiled.call(me, v, parent, i+1, len); }); return buf.join(''); } return t.compiled.call(me, vs, parent, xindex, xcount); }, // private compileTpl : function(tpl){ var fm = Ext.util.Format, useF = this.disableFormats !== true, sep = Ext.isGecko ? "+" : ",", body; function fn(m, name, format, args, math){ if(name.substr(0, 4) == 'xtpl'){ return "'"+ sep +'this.applySubTemplate('+name.substr(4)+', values, parent, xindex, xcount)'+sep+"'"; } var v; if(name === '.'){ v = 'values'; }else if(name === '#'){ v = 'xindex'; }else if(name.indexOf('.') != -1){ v = name; }else{ v = "values['" + name + "']"; } if(math){ v = '(' + v + math + ')'; } if (format && useF) { args = args ? ',' + args : ""; if(format.substr(0, 5) != "this."){ format = "fm." + format + '('; }else{ format = 'this.call("'+ format.substr(5) + '", '; args = ", values"; } } else { args= ''; format = "("+v+" === undefined ? '' : "; } return "'"+ sep + format + v + args + ")"+sep+"'"; } function codeFn(m, code){ return "'"+ sep +'('+code+')'+sep+"'"; } // branched to use + in gecko and [].join() in others if(Ext.isGecko){ body = "tpl.compiled = function(values, parent, xindex, xcount){ return '" + tpl.body.replace(/(\r\n|\n)/g, '\\n').replace(/'/g, "\\'").replace(this.re, fn).replace(this.codeRe, codeFn) + "';};"; }else{ body = ["tpl.compiled = function(values, parent, xindex, xcount){ return ['"]; body.push(tpl.body.replace(/(\r\n|\n)/g, '\\n').replace(/'/g, "\\'").replace(this.re, fn).replace(this.codeRe, codeFn)); body.push("'].join('');};"); body = body.join(''); } eval(body); return this; },
/** * Returns an HTML fragment of this template with the specified values applied. * @param {Object} values The template values. Can be an array if your params are numeric (i.e. {0}) or an object (i.e. {foo: 'bar'}) * @return {String} The HTML fragment */ applyTemplate : function(values){ return this.master.compiled.call(this, values, {}, 1, 1); },
/** * Compile the template to a function for optimized performance. Recommended if the template will be used frequently. * @return {Function} The compiled function */ compile : function(){return this;}
/** * @property re * @hide */
/** * @property disableFormats * @hide */
/** * @method set * @hide */ });
/** * Alias for {@link #applyTemplate} * Returns an HTML fragment of this template with the specified values applied. * @param {Object/Array} values The template values. Can be an array if your params are numeric (i.e. {0}) or an object (i.e. {foo: 'bar'}) * @return {String} The HTML fragment * @member Ext.XTemplate * @method apply */ Ext.XTemplate.prototype.apply = Ext.XTemplate.prototype.applyTemplate;
/** * Creates a template from the passed element's value (display:none textarea, preferred) or innerHTML. * @param {String/HTMLElement} el A DOM element or its id * @return {Ext.Template} The created template * @static */ Ext.XTemplate.from = function(el){ el = Ext.getDom(el); return new Ext.XTemplate(el.value || el.innerHTML); };