Before you go and implement this can you assess if this will affect the speed of template processing?
On May 5, 9:57 pm, Thadeus Burgess <[email protected]> wrote: > It might be possible for the parent to look into its children, and > analyze the child blocks, and if a block in the child contains a > {{super <me>}} it can then take its own value and replace it into the > {{super me}}. > > -- > Thadeus > > On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 9:56 PM, Thadeus Burgess <[email protected]> wrote: > > Right. > > > As much as I would like the functionality... This cannot be done as > > the system stands. Child templates know nothing of their parent, > > therefore they are unable to request anything from the parent > > template. > > > The way that you effectively override a block is by effort of the > > parent looking at all its children and going "Hey, you have the same > > block I do, so I will use yours". > > > So the way to do this, is for the child to know about its parent, and > > its parents parents, and parents parents parents (etc, depending on > > the level of hierarchy.) The issue is, how does this element then > > determine which parent it should pull from, assuming the grandparent > > defines a block, and the parent overrides the block, what is left is > > not what is intended. > > > -- > > Thadeus > > > On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 8:28 PM, Yarko Tymciurak > > <[email protected]> wrote: > >> nyway, I don't know what the right syntax / implementation (exactly) > >> of a template "super" function is - I just know it makes sense, and I > >> think we should have it (I am certainly investing a lot of effort in > >> driving exploration of how it would work, look, and w

