Dear Wiki user,

You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "Couchdb Wiki" for 
change notification.

The "Generating HTML from Javascript shows and lists" page has been changed by 
RogerBinns.
The comment on this change is: Info about Javascript templating.
http://wiki.apache.org/couchdb/Generating%20HTML%20from%20Javascript%20shows%20and%20lists

--------------------------------------------------

New page:
= Generating HTML from Javascript shows and lists =
You can generate output from 
[[http://books.couchdb.org/relax/design-documents/shows|shows]] and 
[[http://books.couchdb.org/relax/design-documents/lists|lists]].  Typically 
this would be HTML intended for a browser but any format can be generated. 
CouchDB already includes 
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECMAScript_for_XML|Javascript support]] for XML 
derived formats (eg Atom feeds). It is impractical to generate HTML directly so 
some sort of templating is recommended.

== Best Practise ==
Generate clear concise simple HTML from your show/list functions.  The 
resulting HTML interface should be usable from constrained devices (eg cell 
phones, set top boxes) as well as being accessible (eg for screen readers for 
blind people) and easy to index for search engines.  This is also easier to 
automatically test.  You can then run Javascript in the browser (if the browser 
supports Javascript and it is turned on) to enhance what is being displayed (eg 
add extra information, tooltips, icons, previews of next/previous content, 
enhanced menus and interaction etc).

== Constraints ==
The Javascript view server and the environment the code run in mean that some 
existing Javascript templating libraries will not work.

 * There is no network/file access so templates cannot be loaded over the 
network or from a file.  Instead they must be strings already included into 
your Javascript code.  (See the !json directive of couchapp which does this for 
you).  They must also return strings.
 * There is no [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_Object_Model|DOM]] 
available (templating libraries often assume that they are running in a browser 
working on the currently displayed document)
 * Some work on complete documents whereas your show and especially list 
functions are often working on multiple strings and template fragments
 * Some only do HTML - this is good if they ensure the result is correct HTML
 * Some do any form of templating (eg plain text) which means your resulting 
HTML can be invalid
 * It is a very good idea to use a library that automatically escapes values 
(eg replacing < with ampersand lt semicolon) otherwise your application will be 
prone to [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting|cross site 
scripting attacks]].  It should also provide a way of disabling the escaping 
when you are intentionally providing raw HTML.
 * Size can be a problem.  Some templating libraries are rather large and 
depend on other libraries. They can create many layersof intermediary functions 
and caching making it hard to debug what is happening.

== Solutions ==
The solutions listed below are known to work with CouchDB show and list 
functions, generating HTML and working with CouchDB deployment conventions (ie 
!json string templates and !code inclusion into the show/list functions).

=== John Resig's micro-templating ===
This engine is a screenful of code and can be downloaded at 
http://ejohn.org/blog/javascript-micro-templating.  You can read about using it 
in the 
[[http://books.couchdb.org/relax/design-documents/shows#Using%20Templates|CouchDB
 book]].  Example usage can be found in the 
[[http://github.com/jchris/sofa|Sofa blog application]].  It does not do HTML 
escaping so you will need to be very careful.  The templating is not HTML 
specific so you can generate other formats.  (The tags are HTML syntax though.)

This is an example of how to do conditionals:

{{{
<% if (o.foo) { %>
    Foo is true-ish
<% } else { %>
    Foo is not true-ish
<% } %>
}}}

Reply via email to