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README

CheckoutableTemplates by Peter Bengtsson, Fry-IT Ltd, 2003-2004.

This software is released under the ZPL license.

Credits to Dieter Maurer and his code that inspired me to enable the showCheckoutableTemplates page.

CheckoutableTemplates allows you to make exceptions to DTMLFile and PageTemplateFile attributes of a Python product. This is highly usable if you have an instance of a Python product class, and you want to change some little thing in one of its templates.

In Zope, it is NOT possible to subclass an template attribute from withing the ZMI. Having templates as attributes in a Python product class is useful because when you roll out a new version, it's easy to include your changes. It's also useful in that you can make the Zope object instance very simple.

The advantage about only having templates instanciated inside the class instance in Zope is that you can make changes to the look and feel of one and only one instance.

Suppose your Python product defines a template like this:

 class MyProduct(ObjectManager):
     meta_type = 'My Meta Type'
     def __init__(self, id, title=''):
         ...

     show_page = DTMLFile('dtml/show_page', globals())
     edit_page = PageTemplateFile('zpt/edit_page', globals())

Then you can use these templates by visiting http://localhost:8080/myinstance/show_page

Suppose you're not the author of the Python product but have found a spelling misstake or an invalid HTML tag in show_page.dtml, or suppose you have two instance of the product; one called myinstance and one called herinstance. For the herinstance instance you want the show_page to look slightly different. How do you fix that without editing the sourcecode of the Python product? You simply can't!

Suppose instead that you have CheckoutableTemplates installed and define your Python product like this:

 from Products.CheckoutableTemplates \
    import CTPageTemplateFile, CTDTMLFile

 class MyProduct(ObjectManager):
     meta_type = 'My Meta Type'
     def __init__(self, id, title=''):
         ...

     show_page = CTDTMLFile('dtml/show_page', globals())
     edit_page = CTPageTemplateFile('zpt/edit_page', globals())

Then, visit http://localhost:8080/myinstance/showCheckoutableTemplates and you'll see a list of templates that you can make exceptions on. When you use that interface to check out a template, an object is created called show_page.dtml and/or edit_page.zpt. Their Id "protected", so you can't call it whatever you want. The only thing that links these template objects with your python product is the Id.

If you have SilverCity (http://silvercity.sourceforge.net/) installed code syntax will be shown more nicely. It is not a necessity.

Again, you visit http://localhost:8080/myinstance/show_page, CheckoutableTemplates makes a check if there is an object called show_page.dtml. If so, use that instead; if not, use the file system template as normal.

If you have installed several Python products that use CheckoutableTemplates, then the showCheckoutableTemplates page will list the templates of all Python products. To help you with this, the Python product can define an attributes called this_package_home like this:

 from Globals import package_home

 from Products.CheckoutableTemplates \
    import CTPageTemplateFile, CTDTMLFile

 class MyProduct(ObjectManager):
     meta_type = 'My Meta Type'
     def __init__(self, id, title=''):
         ...

     show_page = CTDTMLFile('dtml/show_page', globals())
     edit_page = CTPageTemplateFile('zpt/edit_page', globals())

     this_package_home = package_home(globals())

Generally you don't have to worry about this option.

Refreshing a Python product is something you don't have to be worried about. When you refresh the Python product CheckoutableTemplates rechecks all template attributes but only changes those which have changed.

Just because you have defined your template attributes with CheckoutableTemplates doesn't mean that you have to use it. It's just extremely useful IF you will need it at a later point. It also makes it possible to edit your templates via the web if you for some reason can't do it on the command line in emacs.

When you start Zope, CheckoutableTemplates keeps a record of all templates your Python product uses. It stores this in <zoperoot>/var/CTConfig.dump which is a pickle dump.

If you have your zoperoot linked as a symbolic link, you'll have to set this as an environment variable in your start script:

 CT_HOME=/home/peterbe/zope261b2/var
 CT_SOFTWARE_HOME=/home/peterbe/zope261b2/lib/python
 export CT_HOME
 export CT_SOFTWARE_HOME

Set this appropriatly to how you have your Zope set up. I guess that if you do, you know enough about Zope and sys admin to be able to see what needs to be done. The best way to test your settings is that you use the showCheckoutableTemplates page.

It is not recommended for live environments, but useful when debugging your python product, you can enable CT_CAN_WRITEBACK which allows you to save a Zope object template back onto the file system. Set this in your start script like this:

 CT_CAN_WRITEBACK=1
 export CT_CAN_WRITEBACK

To do this on Windows, in start.bat you write:

 SET CT_CAN_WRITEBACK=1

This product was developed to be used in a live environment, but comes with absolutely no warrenty. I advice that you familiarize yourself with CheckoutableTemplates before you decide to enroll it in your best Python products.

All bug reports and suggestions are welcome to [email protected].

The CTPageTemplateFile and CTDTMLFile also accepts a parameter called optimize which can (at the time of writing this) accept values like CSS, HTML or XHTML. If any of these are set, the output CSS/HTML/XHTML will be optimized but stripping out everything excessive such as excess whitespace and comments. The XHTML optimizer is less rough than the HTML optimizer which strips unnecessary quotes. As an example, some CSS can be changed from:

 /* Header 1 */
 h1 {
     font-family: Verdana, Arial;
     color: #123456;
 }

To this:

 h1{font-family:Verdana,Arial;color:#123456;}

Of course it depends on how your HTML output looks like but preliminary calculations have shown that you get on average a 10-20% time gain average. I.e. the time to download the document plus the time to optimize the output. Note: Always test your pages after you have switched on the optimization. Note2: Don't optimize twice. Use sparingly.:

 from Products.CheckoutableTemplates \
    import CTPageTemplateFile, CTDTMLFile

 class MyProduct(ObjectManager):
     meta_type = 'My Meta Type'
     def __init__(self, id, title=''):
         ...

     show_page = CTDTMLFile('dtml/show_page', globals(),
                            optimize='XHTML')
     edit_page = CTPageTemplateFile('zpt/edit_page', globals(),
                                    optimize='HTML')
     styles_css = CTDTMLFile('dtml/show_page', globals(),
                             optimize='CSS')