module ActionController #:nodoc: module Layout #:nodoc: def self.append_features(base) super base.class_eval do alias_method :render_with_no_layout, :render alias_method :render, :render_with_a_layout class << self alias_method :inherited_without_layout, :inherited end end base.extend(ClassMethods) end # Layouts reverse the common pattern of including shared headers and footers in many templates to isolate changes in # repeated setups. The inclusion pattern has pages that look like this: # # <%= render "shared/header" %> # Hello World # <%= render "shared/footer" %> # # This approach is a decent way of keeping common structures isolated from the changing content, but it's verbose # and if you ever want to change the structure of these two includes, you'll have to change all the templates. # # With layouts, you can flip it around and have the common structure know where to insert changing content. This means # that the header and footer is only mentioned in one place, like this: # # # <%= @content_for_layout %> # # # And then you have content pages that look like this: # # hello world # # Not a word about common structures. At rendering time, the content page is computed and then inserted in the layout, # like this: # # # hello world # # # == Accessing shared variables # # Layouts have access to variables specified in the content pages and vice versa. This allows you to have layouts with # references that won't materialize before rendering time: # #

<%= @page_title %>

# <%= @content_for_layout %> # # ...and content pages that fulfill these references _at_ rendering time: # # <% @page_title = "Welcome" %> # Off-world colonies offers you a chance to start a new life # # The result after rendering is: # #

Welcome

# Off-world colonies offers you a chance to start a new life # # == Automatic layout assignment # # If there is a template in app/views/layouts/ with the same name as the current controller then it will be automatically # set as that controller's layout unless explicitly told otherwise. Say you have a WeblogController, for example. If a template named # app/views/layouts/weblog.rhtml or app/views/layouts/weblog.rxml exists then it will be automatically set as # the layout for your WeblogController. You can create a layout with the name application.rhtml or application.rxml # and this will be set as the default controller if there is no layout with the same name as the current controller and there is # no layout explicitly assigned with the +layout+ method. Setting a layout explicitly will always override the automatic behaviour. # # == Inheritance for layouts # # Layouts are shared downwards in the inheritance hierarchy, but not upwards. Examples: # # class BankController < ActionController::Base # layout "bank_standard" # # class InformationController < BankController # # class VaultController < BankController # layout :access_level_layout # # class EmployeeController < BankController # layout nil # # The InformationController uses "bank_standard" inherited from the BankController, the VaultController overwrites # and picks the layout dynamically, and the EmployeeController doesn't want to use a layout at all. # # == Types of layouts # # Layouts are basically just regular templates, but the name of this template needs not be specified statically. Sometimes # you want to alternate layouts depending on runtime information, such as whether someone is logged in or not. This can # be done either by specifying a method reference as a symbol or using an inline method (as a proc). # # The method reference is the preferred approach to variable layouts and is used like this: # # class WeblogController < ActionController::Base # layout :writers_and_readers # # def index # # fetching posts # end # # private # def writers_and_readers # logged_in? ? "writer_layout" : "reader_layout" # end # # Now when a new request for the index action is processed, the layout will vary depending on whether the person accessing # is logged in or not. # # If you want to use an inline method, such as a proc, do something like this: # # class WeblogController < ActionController::Base # layout proc{ |controller| controller.logged_in? ? "writer_layout" : "reader_layout" } # # Of course, the most common way of specifying a layout is still just as a plain template name: # # class WeblogController < ActionController::Base # layout "weblog_standard" # # If no directory is specified for the template name, the template will by default by looked for in +app/views/layouts/+. # # == Conditional layouts # # If you have a layout that by default is applied to all the actions of a controller, you still have the option of rendering # a given action or set of actions without a layout, or restricting a layout to only a single action or a set of actions. The # :only and :except options can be passed to the layout call. For example: # # class WeblogController < ActionController::Base # layout "weblog_standard", :except => :rss # # # ... # # end # # This will assign "weblog_standard" as the WeblogController's layout except for the +rss+ action, which will not wrap a layout # around the rendered view. # # Both the :only and :except condition can accept an arbitrary number of method references, so # #:except => [ :rss, :text_only ] is valid, as is :except => :rss. # # == Using a different layout in the action render call # # If most of your actions use the same layout, it makes perfect sense to define a controller-wide layout as described above. # Some times you'll have exceptions, though, where one action wants to use a different layout than the rest of the controller. # This is possible using the render method. It's just a bit more manual work as you'll have to supply fully # qualified template and layout names as this example shows: # # class WeblogController < ActionController::Base # def help # render :action => "help/index", :layout => "help" # end # end # # As you can see, you pass the template as the first parameter, the status code as the second ("200" is OK), and the layout # as the third. module ClassMethods # If a layout is specified, all actions rendered through render and render_action will have their result assigned # to @content_for_layout, which can then be used by the layout to insert their contents with # <%= @content_for_layout %>. This layout can itself depend on instance variables assigned during action # performance and have access to them as any normal template would. def layout(template_name, conditions = {}) add_layout_conditions(conditions) write_inheritable_attribute "layout", template_name end def layout_conditions #:nodoc: read_inheritable_attribute("layout_conditions") end private def inherited(child) inherited_without_layout(child) child.layout(child.controller_name) unless layout_list.grep(/^#{child.controller_name}\.r(?:x|ht)ml$/).empty? end def layout_list Dir.glob("#{template_root}/layouts/*.r{x,ht}ml").map { |layout| File.basename(layout) } end def add_layout_conditions(conditions) write_inheritable_hash "layout_conditions", normalize_conditions(conditions) end def normalize_conditions(conditions) conditions.inject({}) {|hash, (key, value)| hash.merge(key => [value].flatten.map {|action| action.to_s})} end end # Returns the name of the active layout. If the layout was specified as a method reference (through a symbol), this method # is called and the return value is used. Likewise if the layout was specified as an inline method (through a proc or method # object). If the layout was defined without a directory, layouts is assumed. So layout "weblog/standard" will return # weblog/standard, but layout "standard" will return layouts/standard. def active_layout(passed_layout = nil) layout = passed_layout || self.class.read_inheritable_attribute("layout") active_layout = case layout when Symbol then send(layout) when Proc then layout.call(self) when String then layout end active_layout.include?("/") ? active_layout : "layouts/#{active_layout}" if active_layout end def render_with_a_layout(options = nil, deprecated_status = nil, deprecated_layout = nil) #:nodoc: template_with_options = options.is_a?(Hash) if apply_layout?(template_with_options, options) && (layout = pick_layout(template_with_options, options, deprecated_layout)) options = options.merge :layout => false if template_with_options logger.info("Rendering #{options} within #{layout}") if logger if template_with_options content_for_layout = render_with_no_layout(options) deprecated_status = options[:status] || deprecated_status else content_for_layout = render_with_no_layout(options, deprecated_status) end erase_render_results @template.instance_variable_set("@content_for_layout", content_for_layout) render_text(@template.render_file(layout, true), deprecated_status) else render_with_no_layout(options, deprecated_status) end end private def apply_layout?(template_with_options, options) if template_with_options (options.has_key?(:layout) && options[:layout]!=false) || options.values_at(:text, :file, :inline, :partial, :nothing).compact.empty? else true end end def pick_layout(template_with_options, options, deprecated_layout) if deprecated_layout deprecated_layout elsif template_with_options case layout = options[:layout] when FalseClass nil when NilClass, TrueClass active_layout if action_has_layout? else active_layout(layout) end else active_layout if action_has_layout? end end def action_has_layout? if conditions = self.class.layout_conditions case when only = conditions[:only] only.include?(action_name) when except = conditions[:except] !except.include?(action_name) else true end else true end end end end