If statements in template system

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How can I parse, let's say, {if $var > 2} or {if $var} in a .tpl file in my own version of a templating class. I do not wanna use smarty as I don't need all their plugins. I just want include, if, for and foreach statements.

6

There are 6 answers

0
AntonioCS On

Please use php. Just put in your tpl file:

<?php if ($var > 2) .... ?> 

It's a lot simpler, less code and a lot faster than parsing the file in php

0
Gaurav On

use

<? if( condition ) :
    ....
    ....
else : 
    ....
    ....
endif; ?>

Difference between if () { } and if () : endif;

3
mario On

You already got the answer with your last question: if statements in php templates using tpl
But since you won't go away otherwise, let me quickly answer it and then mention which will be your certain next stumbling blocks.

// handle {if}...{/if} blocks
$content =
preg_replace_callback('#\{if\s(.+?)}(.+?)\{/if}#s', "tmpl_if", $content);

function tmpl_if ($match) {
    list($uu, $if, $inner_content) = $match;

    // eval for the lazy!
    $if = create_function("", "extract(\$GLOBALS['tvars']); return ($if);");

    // a real templating engine would chain to other/central handlers
    if ( $if() ) {
        return $inner_content;
    }
    # else return empty content
}

Using a regular expression like this will trip over a nested if. But you didn't ask about that, so I won't mention it. And as outlined in the comment you would actually need to chain to a central function that does further replacements ({foreach} / {include} / etc.) instead of just return $content as here.

This is doable, but quickly growing cumbersome. And this is why all other templating engines (which you refuse to check out) actually convert .tpl files into .php scripts. That's much easier because PHP can already handle all those control structures that you try to mimick with your own templating class.

0
Rajesh On

You can use the following format into your template file(.tpl).,

{if $url == 'error'}
Error message Invalid Login!
{/if} 
1
Alex On

Actually it's pretty simple unless you need nested if conditions.

$template = '<b>{foo}</b>{if bar} lorem ipsum {bar}{/if}....';

$markers = array(
    'foo' => 'hello',
    'bar' => 'dolor sit amet',  
);

// 1. replace all markers 
foreach($markers as $marker => $value)
    $template = str_replace('{'. $marker .'}', $value, $template);

//2. process if conditions
$template = preg_replace_callback('#\{if\s(.+?)}(.+?)\{/if}#s', function($matches) use ($markers) {

    list($condition, $variable, $content) = $matches;

    if(isset($markers[$variable]) && $markers[$variable]) {
        // if the variable exists in the markers and is "truthy", return the content
        return $content;
    }

}, $template);
0
MaxWell99 On

There is an php code example that parses following temaplate (php 5.3+):

[IF {post_content}]Post content is filled![ENDIF]
[IF {post_content}]Post content is filled![ELSE]{post_content}[ENDIF]

Code:

$tags = array('post_content'=>'POST_CONTENT');

$message = '1: [IF {post_content}]Post content: {post_content}![ENDIF]
            2: [IF {post_content}]Post content is filled![ELSE]Post content is empty![ENDIF]';

$matches = array();

preg_match_all('/\[IF \{([^\}]*)\}\](.[^\]]+)(?:\[ELSE\](.+?))?\[ENDIF\]/s', $message, $matches);

if ( empty($matches) ) {
    return $message;
}

$math_tag = '';
foreach ( $matches[0] as $m_index => $match )
{
    $math_tag =  trim($matches[1][$m_index]);

    if ( !empty($tags[$math_tag]) ) {
        // IF value is not empty
        $message = str_replace($match, $matches[2][$m_index], $message);
    } elseif( empty($tags[$math_tag]) && $matches[3][$m_index] ) {
        // ELSE
        $message = str_replace($match, $matches[3][$m_index], $message);
    } else {
        // IF NO ELSE condition - REMOVE ALL
        $message = str_replace($match, '', $message);
    }
}

foreach($tags as $tag => $value)
   $message = str_replace('{'. $tag .'}', $value, $message);

echo $message;