Views I#
In this part you will:
Register a view that can be opened in the browser
Create and use a template for the view
Topics covered:
ZCML
A simple browser view#
Before writing the talk view itself we step back and have a brief look at views and templates.
A view in Plone is usually a BrowserView
.
It can hold a lot of cool Python code but we will first focus on the template.
Edit the file browser/configure.zcml
and register a new view called training:
1 <configure
2 xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
3 xmlns:browser="http://namespaces.zope.org/browser"
4 xmlns:plone="http://namespaces.plone.org/plone"
5 i18n_domain="ploneconf.site">
6
7 <!-- Set overrides folder for Just-a-Bunch-Of-Templates product -->
8 <include package="z3c.jbot" file="meta.zcml" />
9 <browser:jbot
10 directory="overrides"
11 layer="ploneconf.site.interfaces.IPloneconfSiteLayer"
12 />
13
14 <!-- Publish static files -->
15 <browser:resourceDirectory
16 name="ploneconf.site"
17 directory="static"
18 />
19
20 <browser:page
21 name="training"
22 for="*"
23 template="templates/training.pt"
24 permission="zope2.View"
25 />
26
27 </configure>
Add a file browser/templates/training.pt
<h1>Hello World</h1>
Restart Plone and open http://localhost:8080/Plone/@@training.
You should now see "Hello World".
You now have everything in place to learn about page templates.
Note
The view training
has no Python class registered for it but only a template.
It acts as if it had an empty Python class inheriting from Products.Five.browser.BrowserView
but the way that happens is actually quite a bit of magic...