haml--haml/lib/haml/helpers.rb

467 lines
13 KiB
Ruby

require 'haml/helpers/action_view_mods'
require 'haml/helpers/action_view_extensions'
module Haml
# This module contains various helpful methods to make it easier to do
# various tasks. Haml::Helpers is automatically included in the context
# that a Haml template is parsed in, so all these methods are at your
# disposal from within the template.
module Helpers
self.extend self
@@action_view_defined = defined?(ActionView)
@@force_no_action_view = false
# Returns whether or not ActionView is installed on the system.
def self.action_view?
@@action_view_defined
end
# Note: this does *not* need to be called
# when using Haml helpers normally
# in Rails.
#
# Initializes the current object
# as though it were in the same context
# as a normal ActionView rendering
# using Haml.
# This is useful if you want to use the helpers in a context
# other than the normal setup with ActionView.
# For example:
#
# context = Object.new
# class << context
# include Haml::Helpers
# end
# context.init_haml_helpers
# context.haml_tag :p, "Stuff"
#
def init_haml_helpers
@haml_buffer = Haml::Buffer.new(@haml_buffer, Haml::Engine.new('').send(:options_for_buffer))
nil
end
# call-seq:
# non_haml { ... }
#
# Runs a block of code in a non-Haml context
# (i.e. #is_haml? will return false).
#
# This is mainly useful for rendering sub-templates such as partials in a non-Haml language,
# particularly where helpers may behave differently when run from Haml.
#
# Note that this is automatically applied to Rails partials.
def non_haml
was_active = @haml_buffer.active?
@haml_buffer.active = false
yield
ensure
@haml_buffer.active = was_active
end
# call-seq:
# find_and_preserve(input, tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve])
# find_and_preserve {...}
#
# Uses preserve to convert any newlines inside whitespace-sensitive tags
# into the HTML entities for endlines.
# @tags@ is an array of tags to preserve.
# It defaults to the value of the <tt>:preserve</tt> option.
def find_and_preserve(input = '', tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve], &block)
return find_and_preserve(capture_haml(&block)) if block
input = input.to_s
input.gsub(/<(#{tags.map(&Regexp.method(:escape)).join('|')})([^>]*)>(.*?)(<\/\1>)/im) do
"<#{$1}#{$2}>#{preserve($3)}</#{$1}>"
end
end
# call-seq:
# preserve(input)
# preserve {...}
#
# Takes any string, finds all the endlines and converts them to
# HTML entities for endlines so they'll render correctly in
# whitespace-sensitive tags without screwing up the indentation.
def preserve(input = '', &block)
return preserve(capture_haml(&block)) if block
input.chomp("\n").gsub(/\n/, '&#x000A;').gsub(/\r/, '')
end
alias_method :flatten, :preserve
# Takes an Enumerable object and a block
# and iterates over the object,
# yielding each element to a Haml block
# and putting the result into <tt><li></tt> elements.
# This creates a list of the results of the block.
# For example:
#
# = list_of([['hello'], ['yall']]) do |i|
# = i[0]
#
# Produces:
#
# <li>hello</li>
# <li>yall</li>
#
# And
#
# = list_of({:title => 'All the stuff', :description => 'A book about all the stuff.'}) do |key, val|
# %h3= key.humanize
# %p= val
#
# Produces:
#
# <li>
# <h3>Title</h3>
# <p>All the stuff</p>
# </li>
# <li>
# <h3>Description</h3>
# <p>A book about all the stuff.</p>
# </li>
#
def list_of(array, &block) # :yields: item
to_return = array.collect do |i|
result = capture_haml(i, &block)
if result.count("\n") > 1
result.gsub!("\n", "\n ")
result = "\n #{result.strip}\n"
else
result.strip!
end
"<li>#{result}</li>"
end
to_return.join("\n")
end
# Returns a hash containing default assignments for the xmlns and xml:lang
# attributes of the <tt>html</tt> HTML element.
# It also takes an optional argument for the value of xml:lang and lang,
# which defaults to 'en-US'.
# For example,
#
# %html{html_attrs}
#
# becomes
#
# <html xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml' xml:lang='en-US' lang='en-US'>
#
def html_attrs(lang = 'en-US')
{:xmlns => "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", 'xml:lang' => lang, :lang => lang}
end
# Increments the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds
# to the lines of the template.
# For example:
#
# %h1 foo
# - tab_up
# %p bar
# - tab_down
# %strong baz
#
# Produces:
#
# <h1>foo</h1>
# <p>bar</p>
# <strong>baz</strong>
#
def tab_up(i = 1)
haml_buffer.tabulation += i
end
# Decrements the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds
# to the lines of the template.
#
# See also tab_up.
def tab_down(i = 1)
haml_buffer.tabulation -= i
end
# Surrounds the given block of Haml code with the given characters,
# with no whitespace in between.
# For example:
#
# = surround '(', ')' do
# %a{:href => "food"} chicken
#
# Produces:
#
# (<a href='food'>chicken</a>)
#
# and
#
# = surround '*' do
# %strong angry
#
# Produces:
#
# *<strong>angry</strong>*
#
def surround(front, back = nil, &block)
back ||= front
output = capture_haml(&block)
"#{front}#{output.chomp}#{back}\n"
end
# Prepends the given character to the beginning of the Haml block,
# with no whitespace between.
# For example:
#
# = precede '*' do
# %span.small Not really
#
# Produces:
#
# *<span class='small'>Not really</span>
#
def precede(char, &block)
"#{char}#{capture_haml(&block).chomp}\n"
end
# Appends the given character to the end of the Haml block,
# with no whitespace between.
# For example:
#
# click
# = succeed '.' do
# %a{:href=>"thing"} here
#
# Produces:
#
# click
# <a href='thing'>here</a>.
#
def succeed(char, &block)
"#{capture_haml(&block).chomp}#{char}\n"
end
# Captures the result of the given block of Haml code,
# gets rid of the excess indentation,
# and returns it as a string.
# For example, after the following,
#
# .foo
# - foo = capture_haml(13) do |a|
# %p= a
#
# the local variable <tt>foo</tt> would be assigned to "<p>13</p>\n".
#
def capture_haml(*args, &block)
buffer = eval('_hamlout', block.binding) rescue haml_buffer
with_haml_buffer(buffer) do
position = haml_buffer.buffer.length
block.call(*args)
captured = haml_buffer.buffer.slice!(position..-1).split(/^/)
min_tabs = nil
captured.each do |line|
tabs = line.index(/[^ ]/) || line.length
min_tabs ||= tabs
min_tabs = min_tabs > tabs ? tabs : min_tabs
end
result = captured.map do |line|
line[min_tabs..-1]
end
result.to_s
end
end
def puts(*args) # :nodoc:
warn <<END
DEPRECATION WARNING:
The Haml #puts helper is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.4.
Use the #haml_concat helper instead.
END
haml_concat *args
end
# Outputs text directly to the Haml buffer, with the proper tabulation
def haml_concat(text = "")
haml_buffer.buffer << haml_indent << text.to_s << "\n"
nil
end
# Returns the string that should be used to indent the current line
def haml_indent
' ' * haml_buffer.tabulation
end
#
# call-seq:
# haml_tag(name, *flags, attributes = {}) {...}
# haml_tag(name, text, *flags, attributes = {}) {...}
#
# Creates an HTML tag with the given name and optionally text and attributes.
# Can take a block that will be executed
# between when the opening and closing tags are output.
# If the block is a Haml block or outputs text using haml_concat,
# the text will be properly indented.
#
# <tt>flags</tt> is a list of symbol flags
# like those that can be put at the end of a Haml tag
# (<tt>:/</tt>, <tt>:<</tt>, and <tt>:></tt>).
# Currently, only <tt>:/</tt> and <tt>:<</tt> are supported.
#
# For example,
#
# haml_tag :table do
# haml_tag :tr do
# haml_tag :td, {:class => 'cell'} do
# haml_tag :strong, "strong!"
# haml_concat "data"
# end
# haml_tag :td do
# haml_concat "more_data"
# end
# end
# end
#
# outputs
#
# <table>
# <tr>
# <td class='cell'>
# <strong>
# strong!
# </strong>
# data
# </td>
# <td>
# more_data
# </td>
# </tr>
# </table>
#
def haml_tag(name, *rest, &block)
name = name.to_s
text = rest.shift.to_s unless [Symbol, Hash, NilClass].any? {|t| rest.first.is_a? t}
flags = []
flags << rest.shift while rest.first.is_a? Symbol
attributes = Haml::Precompiler.build_attributes(haml_buffer.html?,
haml_buffer.options[:attr_wrapper],
rest.shift || {})
if text.nil? && block.nil? && (haml_buffer.options[:autoclose].include?(name) || flags.include?(:/))
haml_concat "<#{name}#{attributes} />"
return nil
end
if flags.include?(:/)
raise Error.new("Self-closing tags can't have content.") if text
raise Error.new("Illegal nesting: nesting within a self-closing tag is illegal.") if block
end
tag = "<#{name}#{attributes}>"
if block.nil?
tag << text.to_s << "</#{name}>"
haml_concat tag
return
end
if text
raise Error.new("Illegal nesting: content can't be both given to haml_tag :#{name} and nested within it.")
end
if flags.include?(:<)
tag << capture_haml(&block).strip << "</#{name}>"
haml_concat tag
return
end
haml_concat tag
tab_up
block.call
tab_down
haml_concat "</#{name}>"
nil
end
# Characters that need to be escaped to HTML entities from user input
HTML_ESCAPE = { '&'=>'&amp;', '<'=>'&lt;', '>'=>'&gt;', '"'=>'&quot;', "'"=>'&#039;', }
# Returns a copy of <tt>text</tt> with ampersands, angle brackets and quotes
# escaped into HTML entities.
def html_escape(text)
text.to_s.gsub(/[\"><&]/) { |s| HTML_ESCAPE[s] }
end
# Escapes HTML entities in <tt>text</tt>, but without escaping an ampersand
# that is already part of an escaped entity.
def escape_once(text)
text.to_s.gsub(/[\"><]|&(?!([a-zA-Z]+|(#\d+));)/) { |s| HTML_ESCAPE[s] }
end
# Returns whether or not the current template is a Haml template.
#
# This function, unlike other Haml::Helpers functions,
# also works in other ActionView templates,
# where it will always return false.
def is_haml?
!@haml_buffer.nil? && @haml_buffer.active?
end
# Returns whether or not +block+ is defined directly in a Haml template.
def block_is_haml?(block)
eval('_hamlout', block.binding)
true
rescue
false
end
private
# call-seq:
# with_haml_buffer(buffer) {...}
#
# Runs the block with the given buffer as the currently active buffer.
def with_haml_buffer(buffer)
@haml_buffer, old_buffer = buffer, @haml_buffer
old_buffer.active, was_active = false, old_buffer.active? if old_buffer
@haml_buffer.active = true
yield
ensure
@haml_buffer.active = false
old_buffer.active = was_active if old_buffer
@haml_buffer = old_buffer
end
# Gets a reference to the current Haml::Buffer object.
def haml_buffer
@haml_buffer
end
# Gives a proc the same local "_hamlout" and "_erbout" variables
# that the current template has.
def haml_bind_proc(&proc)
_hamlout = haml_buffer
_erbout = _hamlout.buffer
proc { |*args| proc.call(*args) }
end
include ActionViewExtensions if self.const_defined? "ActionViewExtensions"
end
end
class Object
# Haml overrides various ActionView helpers,
# which call an #is_haml? method
# to determine whether or not the current context object
# is a proper Haml context.
# Because ActionView helpers may be included in non-ActionView::Base classes,
# it's a good idea to define is_haml? for all objects.
def is_haml?
false
end
end