On Thu, Jan 09, 2003 at 02:54:13PM +0000, Raphael Arlitt wrote:
But this generated code is not usuable and workable with WYSIWYG tools and hence PAL
"PAL"? I assume you mean TAL, part of the trinity (TAL / TALES / METAL) that make up Zope Page Templates, aka Page Templates, aka ZPT.
But how do I now modularize my site with PAL in the DTML way?
Be aware that every ZPT must be valid XML, so you can't do some DTML-ish things such as put <html> in one template and the closing </html> in another. This takes a bit of getting used to, but it's really no bother. With that in mind, there are two ways I know to modularize your templates: 1) METAL macros. This allows you to create complete viewable pages and then insert bits of one page inside another page. too lengthy for me to describe here, but you can quickly get the idea from the Zope Book, chapter "Advanced Page Templates", section "Macros": http://www.zope.org/Documentation/Books/ZopeBook/2_6Edition/AdvZPT.stx 2) <span tal:replace="structure here/name_of_other_template"> </span> This will replace the entire <span>...</span> with the result of rendering my_other_template. Roughly equivalent to <dtml-var my_other_template>. This violates the everything-is-a-complete-page principle, but I still find it useful. Of course it can be any other html tag besides <span>, and you can use tal:content instead of tal:replace if you want to insert things without removing the enclosing tag. -- Paul Winkler http://www.slinkp.com Look! Up in the sky! It's AMAZING SCARECROW! (courtesy of isometric.spaceninja.com)