Custom views¶
Configuring custom views and using display forms
Simple views¶
Creating basic views
So far, our types have used the default views. They use the display widgets from z3c.form, much like the add and edit forms use the edit widgets. This is functional, but not very attractive. Most types will need one or more custom view templates.
Dexterity types are no different from any other content
type in Plone. You can register a view for your schema
interface, and it will be available on your type. If the
view is named view, it will be the default view,
at least if you use the standard FTI configuration. This
is because the FTI’s
default_view
property is set to
view
, and
view
is in the list of
view_methods.
Note
addcontent
will have created a "SampleView" class in each
content type's .py file. Just rename it to
"View" to follow the example.
First create a view registration with a
<browser:page
/>
ZCML directive in your
`configure.zcml
file:
<configure
xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
xmlns:browser="http://namespaces.zope.org/browser">
...
<browser:page
name="view"
for="example.conference.program.IProgram"
class="example.conference.program.ProgramView"
template="templates/programview.pt"
permission="zope2.View"
/>
</configure>
Secondly add a browser view in
program.py
as follows:
from Acquisition import aq_inner
from example.conference.session import ISession
from plone import api
from Products.Five import BrowserView
class ProgramView(BrowserView):
def sessions(self):
"""Return a catalog search result of sessions to show."""
context = aq_inner(self.context)
catalog = api.portal.get_tool(name='portal_catalog')
return catalog(
object_provides=ISession.__identifier__,
path='/'.join(context.getPhysicalPath()),
sort_on='sortable_title')
We have added
sessions
, a helper method which will be used in the view.
You can add any methods to the view. They will be
available to the template via the
view
variable. The content object is available via
context
.
Finaly add a template in
templates/programview.pt
:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en"
xmlns:tal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/tal"
xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal"
xmlns:i18n="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/i18n"
lang="en"
metal:use-macro="context/main_template/macros/master"
i18n:domain="example.conference">
<body>
<metal:main fill-slot="main">
<tal:main-macro metal:define-macro="main"
tal:define="toLocalizedTime nocall:context/@@plone/toLocalizedTime">
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.abovecontenttitle" />
<h1 class="documentFirstHeading" tal:content="context/title" />
<div class="discreet">
<tal:block condition="context/start">
<span i18n:translate="label_from">From:</span>
<span tal:content="python:context.start.strftime('%x %X')" />
</tal:block>
<tal:block condition="context/end">
<span i18n:translate="label_to">To:</span>
<span tal:content="python:context.end.strftime('%x %X')" />
</tal:block>
</div>
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.belowcontenttitle" />
<p class="documentDescription" tal:content="context/description" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.abovecontentbody" />
<div tal:content="structure context/details/output" />
<h2 i18n:translate="heading_sessions">Sessions</h2>
<dl>
<tal:block repeat="session view/sessions">
<dt>
<a tal:attributes="href session/getURL"
tal:content="session/Title" />
</dt>
<dd tal:content="session/Description" />
</tal:block>
</dl>
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.belowcontentbody" />
</tal:main-macro>
</metal:main>
</body>
</html>
For the most part, this template outputs the values of the
various fields, using the
sessions()
method on the view to obtain the sessions contained within
the program.
Note
Notice how the
details
RichText field is output as
tal:content="structure
context/details/output"
. The
structure
keyword ensures that the rendered HTML is not escaped.
The extra traversal to
details/output
is necessary because the RichText field
actually stores a RichTextValue object that
contains not only the raw text as entered by the user,
but also a MIME type (e.g.
text/html
) and the rendered output text.
RichText fields are covered in more detail
later in this manual.
The view for
Presenter
is even simpler:
<configure
xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
xmlns:browser="http://namespaces.zope.org/browser">
...
<browser:page
name="view"
for="example.conference.program.IPresenter"
template="templates/presenterview.pt"
permission="zope2.View"
/>
</configure>
The template, in
templates/presenterview.pt
, is similar to the previous template:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en"
xmlns:tal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/tal"
xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal"
xmlns:i18n="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/i18n"
lang="en"
metal:use-macro="context/main_template/macros/master"
i18n:domain="example.conference">
<body>
<metal:main fill-slot="main">
<tal:main-macro metal:define-macro="main">
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.abovecontenttitle" />
<h1 class="documentFirstHeading" tal:content="context/title" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.belowcontenttitle" />
<p class="documentDescription" tal:content="context/description" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.abovecontentbody" />
<div tal:content="structure context/bio/output" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.belowcontentbody" />
</tal:main-macro>
</metal:main>
</body>
</html>
Obviously, these views are very basic. Much more interesting views could be created by putting a little more work into the templates.
You should also realise that you can create any type of
view using this technique. Your view does not have to be
related to a particular content type, even. You could set
the context to
Interface
, for example, to make a view that’s available on all
types.
Display view¶
Using display widgets in your views
In the previous section, we created a browser view. This kind of view is the most common. Sometimes we want to make use of the widgets and information in the type’s schema more directly. For example to invoke transforms or re-use more complex HTML.
To do this, you can use a display view. This is
really just a view base class that knows about the schema
of a type. We will use an example in
session.py
, with a template in
templates/sessionview.pt
.
Note
Display view involve the same type of overhead as add- and edit-forms. If you have complex content type with many behaviors, fieldsets and widget hints, you may notice a slow-down. This can be a problem on high volume sites.
The new view class is pretty much the same as before,
except that we derive from
plone.dexterity.browser.view.DefaultView
:
<configure
xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
xmlns:browser="http://namespaces.zope.org/browser">
...
<browser:page
name="view"
for="example.conference.program.ISession"
class="example.conference.session.SessionView"
template="templates/sessionview.pt"
permission="zope2.View"
/>
</configure>
from plone.dexterity.browser.view import DefaultView
class SessionView(DefaultView):
pass
This gives our view a few extra properties that we can use in the template:
-
view.w
-
a dictionary of all the display widgets, keyed by field
names. For fields provided by behaviors, that is usually
prefixed with the behavior interface name (
IBehaviorInterface.field_name
). For the default schema, unqualified names apply. -
view.widgets
- contains a list of widgets in schema order for the default fieldset.
-
view.groups
- contains a list of fieldsets in fieldset order.
-
view.fieldsets
- contains a dictionary mapping fieldset name to fieldset.
-
widgets
-
On a fieldset (group), you can access a
widgets
list to get widgets in that fieldset.
The
w
dict is the most commonly used.
The
templates/sessionview.pt
template contains the following:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en"
xmlns:tal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/tal"
xmlns:metal="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/metal"
xmlns:i18n="http://xml.zope.org/namespaces/i18n"
lang="en"
metal:use-macro="context/main_template/macros/master"
i18n:domain="example.conference">
<body>
<metal:main fill-slot="main">
<tal:main-macro metal:define-macro="main">
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.abovecontenttitle" />
<h1 class="documentFirstHeading" tal:content="context/title" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.belowcontenttitle" />
<p class="documentDescription" tal:content="context/description" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.abovecontentbody" />
<div tal:content="structure view/w/details/render" />
<div tal:replace="structure provider:plone.belowcontentbody" />
</tal:main-macro>
</metal:main>
</body>
</html>
Notice how we use expressions like
view/w/details/render
(where
details
is the field name) to get the rendering of a widget. Other
properties include
__name__
, the field name, and
label
, the field title.