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688 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
688 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
# Tutorial 2 - Extending a basic site
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## Overview
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In the [first tutorial](1-building-a-basic-site) we learned how to create a basic site using SilverStripe. This
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tutorial builds on what you have learned in [the first tutorial](1-building-a-basic-site), so it is recommended
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that you complete it first.
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In this tutorial you will explore extending SilverStripe by creating your own page types. In doing this you will get a
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good overview of how SilverStripe works.
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## What are we working towards?
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Throughout this tutorial we are going to work on adding two new sections to the site we built in the first tutorial. The
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first is a news section, with a recent news listing on the homepage and an RSS feed. The second is a staff section,
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which demonstrates more complex database structures by associating an image with each staff member.
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![](_images/news-with-rss-small.jpg)![](_images/einstein-small.jpg)
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## The SilverStripe data model
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A large part of designing complex SilverStripe sites is the creation of your own page types. Before we progress any
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further, it is important to understand what a page type is, and how the SilverStripe data model works.
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SilverStripe is based on the **"Model-View-Controller"** design pattern. This means that SilverStripe attempts to separate
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data, logic and presentation as much as possible. Every page has three separate parts which are combined to give you the
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final page. Lets look at each one individually:
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### Model
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All content on your site is stored in a database. There is a table in the database corresponding for every class that is
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a child of the `[api:DataObject]` class. Every object of that class corresponds to a row in that table -
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this is your "data object", the **"model"** of Model-View-Controller. A page type has a data object that represents all the data for your page - rather than inheriting
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directly from data object it inherits from `[api:SiteTree]`. We generally create a "Page" data object, and subclass this for
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the rest of the page types. This allows us to define behavior that is consistent across all pages in our site.
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### View
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The **"view"** is the presentation of your site. As we have already seen, the templates SilverStripe uses to render a page
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is dependent on the page type. Using both your templates and css, you are able to have full control over the
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presentation of your site.
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### Controller
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A page type also has a **"controller"**. A controller contains all the code used to manipulate your data before it is
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rendered. For example, suppose you were making an auction site, and you only wanted to display the auctions closing in
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the next ten minutes. You would implement this in the controller. The controller for a page should inherit from
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`[api:ContentController]`. Just as we create a "Page" data object and subclass it for the rest of the
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site, we also create a "Page_Controller" that is subclassed.
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Creating a new page type simply requires creating these three things. You can then have full control over presentation,
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the database, which fields can be edited in the CMS, and can use code to make our pages do much more clever things.
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A more in-depth introduction of Model-View-Controller can be found
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[here](http://www.slash7.com/articles/2005/02/22/mvc-the-most-vexing-conundrum).
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![](_images/pagetype-inheritance.jpg)
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## Creating the news section page types
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Let's make our news section. We'll need two new page types for this. The first one is obvious: we need an *ArticlePage*
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page type. The second is a little less obvious: we need an *ArticleHolder* page type that contains our articles.
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We'll start with the *ArticlePage* page type. First we create the model, a class called "ArticlePage". We put the
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*ArticlePage* class into a file called "ArticlePage.php" inside *mysite/code*. We also put the controller,
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*ArticlePage_Controller*, in here. Any other classes that are related to *ArticlePage* – for example, the class
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*ArticlePage_AnythingElse* - will also go into "ArticlePage.php".
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**mysite/code/ArticlePage.php**
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:::php
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<?php
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/**
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* Defines the ArticlePage page type
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*/
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class ArticlePage extends Page {
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static $db = array(
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);
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static $has_one = array(
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);
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}
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class ArticlePage_Controller extends Page_Controller {
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}
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?>
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Here we've created our data object/controller pair, but we haven't actually extended them at all. Don't worry about the
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*$db* and *$has_one* arrays just yet, we'll explain them soon, as well as other ways in which you can extend your page
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types. SilverStripe will use the template for the *Page* page type as explained in the first tutorial, so we don't need
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to specifically create the view for this page type.
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Let's create the *ArticleHolder* page type.
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**mysite/code/ArticleHolder.php**
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:::php
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<?php
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/**
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* Defines the ArticleHolder page type
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*/
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class ArticleHolder extends Page {
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static $db = array(
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);
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static $has_one = array(
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);
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static $allowed_children = array('ArticlePage');
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}
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class ArticleHolder_Controller extends Page_Controller {
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}
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?>
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Here we have done something interesting: the *$allowed_children* field. This is one of a number of static fields we can
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define to change the properties of a page type. The *$allowed_children* field is an array of page types that are allowed
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to be children of the page in the site tree. As we only want news articles in the news section, we only want
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*ArticlePage* pages for children. We can enforce this in the CMS by setting the *$allowed_children* field.
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We will be introducing other fields like this as we progress; there is a full list in the documentation for
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`[api:SiteTree]`.
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Now that we have created our page types, we need to let SilverStripe rebuild the database. If we rebuild the database by
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going to [http://localhost/dev/build?flush=1](http://localhost/dev/build?flush=1), SilverStripe will detect that there are two
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new page types and add them to the list of page types in the database.
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> It is SilverStripe convention to suffix general page types with "Page", and page types that hold other page types with
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> "Holder". This is to ensure that we don't have URLs with the same name as a page type; if we named our *ArticleHolder*
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> page type "News", it would conflict with the page name also called "News".
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## Adding date and author fields
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Now that we have an *ArticlePage* page type, let's make it a little more useful. Remember the *$db* array? We can use
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this array to add extra fields to the database. It would be nice to know when each article was posted, and who posted
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it. Change the *$db* array in the *ArticlePage* class so it looks like this:
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:::php
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<?php
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class ArticlePage extends Page {
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static $db = array(
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'Date' => 'Date',
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'Author' => 'Text'
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);
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// .....
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}
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Every entry in the array is a key-value pair. The key is the name of the field, and the value is the type. We have a
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`[api:Date]` for a complete list of different data types.
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> Note: The names chosen for the fields you add must not already be used. Be careful using field names such as Title,
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> Content etc. as these may already be defined in the page types your new page is extending from.
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If we rebuild the database, we will see that now the *ArticlePage* table is created. Even though we had an *ArticlePage*
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page type before, the table was not created because we had no fields that were unique to the article page type. We now
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have the extra fields in the database, but still no way of changing them. To add these fields to the CMS we have to
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override the *getCMSFields()* method, which is called by the CMS when it creates the form to edit a page. Add the
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method to the *ArticlePage* class.
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:::php
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<?php
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class ArticlePage extends Page {
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// ...
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public function getCMSFields() {
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$fields = parent::getCMSFields();
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', new DateField('Date'), 'Content');
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', new TextField('Author'), 'Content');
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return $fields;
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}
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}
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// ...
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Let's walk through this method.
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:::php
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$fields = parent::getCMSFields();
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Firstly, we get the fields from the parent class; we want to add fields, not replace them. The *$fields* variable
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returned is a `[api:FieldList]` object.
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:::php
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', new DateField('Date'), 'Content');
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', new TextField('Author'), 'Content');
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We can then add our new fields with *addFieldToTab*. The first argument is the tab on which we want to add the field to:
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"Root.Content" is the tab which the content editor is on. The second argument is the field to add; this is not a
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database field, but a `[api:FormField]` documentation for more details.
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:::php
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return $fields;
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Finally, we return the fields to the CMS. If we flush the cache (by adding ?flush=1 at the end of the URL), we will be able
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to edit the fields in the CMS.
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Now that we have created our page types, let's add some content. Go into the CMS and create an *ArticleHolder* page
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named "News", and create some *ArticlePage*s inside it.
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![](_images/news-cms.jpg)
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## Modifing the date field
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**Please note:** As of version 2.4, the DateField type no longer automatically adds a javascript datepicker. Your date field will look just like a text field.
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This makes it confusing and doesn't give the user much help when adding a date.
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To make the date field a bit more user friendly, you can add a dropdown calendar, set the date format and add better title.
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:::php
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<?php
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class ArticlePage extends Page {
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// .....
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public function getCMSFields() {
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$fields = parent::getCMSFields();
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', $dateField = new DateField('Date','Article Date (for example: 20/12/2010)'), 'Content');
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$dateField->setConfig('showcalendar', true);
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$dateField->setConfig('dateformat', 'dd/MM/YYYY');
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', new TextField('Author','Author Name'), 'Content');
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return $fields;
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}
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Let's walk through these changes.
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:::php
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', $dateField = new DateField('Date','Article Date (for example: 20/12/2010)'), 'Content');
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*$dateField* is added only to the DateField in order to change the configuration.
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:::php
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$dateField->setConfig('showCalendar', true);
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Set *showCalendar* to true to have a calendar appear underneath the Date field when you click on the field.
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:::php
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$dateField->setConfig('dateformat', 'dd/MM/YYYY');
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*dateFormat* allows you to specify how you wish the date to be entered and displayed in the CMS field.
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:::php
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$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Content', new TextField('Author','Author Name'), 'Content');
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By default the first argument *'Date'* or *'Author'* is shown as the title, however this might not be that helpful so to change the title,
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add the new title as the second argument. See the `[api:DateField]` documentation for more details.
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## Creating the templates
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We can already look at the content of news pages on our site, because the article holder page and the article pages
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inherit their templates from Page. But we're not getting the author and date fields displayed in either case.
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So let's create a template for each of our new page types. We'll put these in *themes/tutorial/templates/Layout* so we
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only have to define the page specific parts: SilverStripe will use *themes/tutorial/templates/Page.ss* for the basic
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page layout.
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First, the template for displaying a single article:
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/ArticlePage.ss**
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:::ss
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<% if Menu(2) %>
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<ul id="Menu2">
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<% control Menu(2) %>
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<li class="$LinkingMode"><a href="$Link" title="Go to the $Title page">$MenuTitle</a></li>
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<% end_control %>
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</ul>
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<% end_if %>
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<div id="Content" class="typography">
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<% if Level(2) %>
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<div class="breadcrumbs">
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$Breadcrumbs
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</div>
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<% end_if %>
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<h1>$Title</h1>
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$Content
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<div class="newsDetails">
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Posted on $Date.Nice by $Author
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</div>
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</div>
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The first block of code is our regular second level menu; we also have our regular breadcrumbs code here. We will see
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how to remove these blocks of repetitive code in a bit.
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We use *$Date* and *$Author* to access the new fields. In fact, all template variables and page controls come from
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either the data object or the controller for the page being displayed. The *$Breadcrumbs* variable comes from the
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*Breadcrumbs()* method of the `[api:SiteTree]` class. *$Date* and *$Author* come from the *Article* table through
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your data object. *$Content* comes from the *SiteTree* table through the same data object. The data for your page is
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spread across several tables in the database matched by id - e.g. *Content* is in the *SiteTree* table, and *Date* and
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*Author* are in the *Article* table. SilverStripe matches these records by their ids and collates them into the single
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data object.
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![](_images/data-collation.jpg)
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Rather than using *$Date* directly, we use *$Date.Nice*. If we look in the `[api:Date]` documentation, we can see
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that the *Nice* function returns the date in *dd/mm/yyyy* format, rather than the *yyyy-mm-dd* format stored in the
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database.
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![](_images/news.jpg)
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Now we'll create a template for the article holder: we want our news section to show a list of news items, each with a
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summary.
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/ArticleHolder.ss**
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:::ss
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<div id="Content" class="typography">
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$Content
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<ul id="NewsList">
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<% control Children %>
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<li class="newsDateTitle"><a href="$Link" title="Read more on "{$Title}"">$Title</a></li>
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<li class="newsDateTitle">$Date.Nice</li>
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<li class="newsSummary">$Content.FirstParagraph <a href="$Link" title="Read more on "{$Title}"">Read more >></a></li>
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<% end_control %>
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</ul>
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</div>
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Here we use the page control *Children*. As the name suggests, this control allows you to iterate over the children of a
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page, which in this case is our news articles. The *$Link* variable will give the address of the article which we can
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use to create a link, and the *FirstParagraph* function of the `[api:HTMLText]` field gives us a nice summary of the
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article.
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![](_images/articleholder.jpg)
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Remember that the visual styles are not part of the CMS, they are defined in the tutorial CSS file.
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### Using include files in templates
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The second level menu is something we want in most, but not all, pages so we can't put it in the base template. By
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putting it in a separate file in the *tutorial/templates/Includes* folder, we can use `<% include templatename %>` to
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include it in our other templates. Separate the second level menu into a new file *themes/tutorial/templates/Includes/Menu2.ss*.
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Includes/Menu2.ss**
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:::ss
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<% if Menu(2) %>
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<ul id="Menu2">
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<% control Menu(2) %>
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<li class="$LinkingMode"><a href="$Link" title="Go to the $Title page">$MenuTitle</a></li>
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<% end_control %>
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</ul>
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<% end_if %>
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And then replace the second level menu with `<% include Menu2 %>` in *Page.ss* and *ArticlePage.ss* like so:
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/Page.ss**, **themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/ArticlePage.ss**
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:::ss
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<% include Menu2 %>
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<div id="Content" class="typography">
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...
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Do the same with the breadcrumbs:
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Includes/Breadcrumbs.ss**
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:::ss
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<% if Level(2) %>
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<div class="breadcrumbs">
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$Breadcrumbs
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</div>
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<% end_if %>
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/Page.ss**, **themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/ArticlePage.ss**
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:::ss
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...
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<div id="Content" class="typography">
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<% include Breadcrumbs %>
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...
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You can make your templates more modular and easier to maintain by separating commonly-used pieces into include files.
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### Changing the icons of pages in the CMS
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Let's now make a purely cosmetic change that nevertheless helps to make the information presented in the CMS clearer.
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Add the following field to the *ArticleHolder* and *ArticlePage* classes:
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:::php
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static $icon = "themes/tutorial/images/treeicons/news";
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And this one to the *HomePage* class:
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:::php
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static $icon = "themes/tutorial/images/treeicons/home";
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This will change the icons for the pages in the CMS.
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> Note: that the corresponding filename to the path given for $icon will end with **-file.gif**,
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> e.g. when you specify **news** above, the filename will be **news-file.gif**.
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![](_images/icons2.jpg)
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### Allowing comments on news articles
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A handy feature built into SilverStripe is the ability for guests to your site to leave comments on pages. We can turn
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this on for an article simply by ticking the box in the behaviour tab of a page in the CMS. Enable this for all your
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*ArticlePage*s.
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![](_images/comments.jpg)
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We then need to include *$PageComments* in our template, which will insert the comment form as well as all comments left
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on the page.
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/ArticlePage.ss**
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:::html
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...
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<div class="newsDetails">
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Posted on $Date.Nice by $Author
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</div>
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$PageComments
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...
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You should also prepare the *Page* template in the same manner, so comments can be enabled at a later point on any page.
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![](_images/news-comments.jpg)
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It would be nice to have comments on for all articles by default. We can do this with the *$defaults* array. Add this to
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the *ArticlePage* class:
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:::php
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static $defaults = array(
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'ProvideComments' => true
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);
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You can set defaults for any of the fields in your data object. *ProvideComments* is defined in *SiteTree*, so it is
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part of our *ArticlePage* data object.
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## Showing the latest news on the homepage
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It would be nice to greet page visitors with a summary of the latest news when they visit the homepage. This requires a
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little more code though - the news articles are not direct children of the homepage, so we can't use the *Children*
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control. We can get the data for the news articles by implementing our own function in *HomePage_Controller*.
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**mysite/code/HomePage.php**
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:::php
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...
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public function LatestNews($num=5) {
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$news = DataObject::get_one("ArticleHolder");
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return ($news) ? DataObject::get("ArticlePage", "ParentID = $news->ID", "Date DESC", "", $num) : false;
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}
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...
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This function simply runs a database query that gets the latest news articles from the database. By default, this is
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five, but you can change it by passing a number to the function. See the `[api:DataObject]` documentation for
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details. We can reference this function as a page control in our *HomePage* template:
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**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/Homepage.ss**
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:::ss
|
||
...
|
||
$Content
|
||
<ul id="NewsList">
|
||
<% control LatestNews %>
|
||
<li class="newsDateTitle"><a href="$Link" title="Read more on "{$Title}"">$Title</a></li>
|
||
<li class="newsDateTitle">$Date.Nice</li>
|
||
<li class="newsSummary">$Content.FirstParagraph<a href="$Link" title="Read more on "{$Title}"">Read more >></a></li>
|
||
<% end_control %>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
...
|
||
|
||
|
||
When SilverStripe comes across a variable or page control it doesn't recognize, it first passes control to the
|
||
controller. If the controller doesn't have a function for the variable or page control, it then passes control to the
|
||
data object. If it has no matching functions, it then searches its database fields. Failing that it will return nothing.
|
||
|
||
The controller for a page is only created when page is actually visited, while the data object is available when the
|
||
page is referenced in other pages, e.g. by page controls. A good rule of thumb is to put all functions specific to the
|
||
page currently being viewed in the controller; only if a function needs to be used in another page should you put it in
|
||
the data object.
|
||
|
||
![](_images/homepage-news.jpg)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Creating a RSS feed
|
||
|
||
An RSS feed is something that no news section should be without. SilverStripe makes it easy to create RSS feeds by
|
||
providing an `[api:RSSFeed]` class to do all the hard work for you. Create the following function in the
|
||
*ArticleHolder_Controller*:
|
||
|
||
:::php
|
||
public function rss() {
|
||
$rss = new RSSFeed($this->Children(), $this->Link(), "The coolest news around");
|
||
$rss->outputToBrowser();
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
|
||
This function simply creates an RSS feed of all the news articles, and outputs it to the browser. If you go to
|
||
[http://localhost/news/rss](http://localhost/news/rss) you will see our RSS feed. What happens here is that
|
||
when there is more to a URL after the page's base URL - "rss" in this case - SilverStripe will call the function with
|
||
that name on the controller if it exists.
|
||
|
||
Depending on your browser, you should see something like the picture below. If your browser doesn't support RSS, you
|
||
will most likely see the XML output instead.
|
||
|
||
![](_images/rss-feed.jpg)
|
||
|
||
Now all we need is to let the user know that our RSS feed exists. The `[api:RSSFeed]` in your controller, it will be
|
||
called when the page is requested. Add this function to *ArticleHolder_Controller*:
|
||
|
||
:::php
|
||
public function init() {
|
||
RSSFeed::linkToFeed($this->Link() . "rss");
|
||
parent::init();
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
|
||
This automatically generates a link-tag in the header of our template. The *init* function is then called on the parent
|
||
class to ensure any initialization the parent would have done if we hadn't overridden the *init* function is still
|
||
called. In Firefox you can see the RSS feed link in the address bar:
|
||
|
||
![](_images/rss.jpg)
|
||
|
||
## Adding a staff section
|
||
|
||
Now that we have a complete news section, let's move on to the staff section. We need to create *StaffHolder* and
|
||
*StaffPage* page types, for an overview on all staff members and a detail-view for a single member. First let's start
|
||
with the *StaffHolder* page type.
|
||
|
||
**mysite/code/StaffHolder.php**
|
||
|
||
:::php
|
||
<?php
|
||
|
||
class StaffHolder extends Page {
|
||
static $db = array(
|
||
);
|
||
static $has_one = array(
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
static $allowed_children = array('StaffPage');
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
class StaffHolder_Controller extends Page_Controller {
|
||
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
|
||
Nothing here should be new. The *StaffPage* page type is more interesting though. Each staff member has a portrait
|
||
image. We want to make a permanent connection between this image and the specific *StaffPage* (otherwise we could simply
|
||
insert an image in the *$Content* field).
|
||
|
||
**mysite/code/StaffPage.php**
|
||
|
||
:::php
|
||
<?php
|
||
|
||
class StaffPage extends Page {
|
||
static $db = array(
|
||
);
|
||
static $has_one = array(
|
||
'Photo' => 'Image'
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
public function getCMSFields() {
|
||
$fields = parent::getCMSFields();
|
||
|
||
$fields->addFieldToTab("Root.Content.Images", new UploadField('Photo'));
|
||
|
||
return $fields;
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
class StaffPage_Controller extends Page_Controller {
|
||
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
|
||
Instead of adding our *Image* as a field in *$db*, we have used the *$has_one* array. This is because an *Image* is not
|
||
a simple database field like all the fields we have seen so far, but has its own database table. By using the *$has_one*
|
||
array, we create a relationship between the *StaffPage* table and the *Image* table by storing the id of the respective
|
||
*Image* in the *StaffPage* table.
|
||
|
||
We then add an `[api:UploadField]` in the *getCMSFields* function to the tab "Root.Content.Images". Since this tab doesn't exist,
|
||
the *addFieldToTab* function will create it for us. The *ImageField* allows us to select an image or upload a new one in
|
||
the CMS.
|
||
|
||
![](_images/photo.jpg)
|
||
|
||
Rebuild the database ([http://localhost/dev/build?flush=1](http://localhost/dev/build?flush=1)) and open the CMS. Create
|
||
a new *StaffHolder* called "Staff" in the "About Us" section, and create some *StaffPage*s in it.
|
||
|
||
![](_images/create-staff.jpg)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Creating the staff section templates
|
||
|
||
The staff section templates aren't too difficult to create, thanks to the utility methods provided by the `[api:Image]` class.
|
||
|
||
**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/StaffHolder.ss**
|
||
|
||
:::ss
|
||
<% include Menu2 %>
|
||
|
||
<div id="Content" class="typography">
|
||
<% include Breadcrumbs %>
|
||
$Content
|
||
|
||
<ul id="StaffList">
|
||
<% control Children %>
|
||
<li>
|
||
<div class="staffname"><a href="$Link">$Title</a></div>
|
||
<div class="staffphoto">$Photo.SetWidth(50)</div>
|
||
<div class="staffdescription"><p>$Content.FirstSentence</p></div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
<% end_control %>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
This template is very similar to the *ArticleHolder* template. The *SetWidth* method of the `[api:Image]` class
|
||
will resize the image before sending it to the browser. The resized image is cached, so the server doesn't have to
|
||
resize the image every time the page is viewed.
|
||
|
||
![](_images/staff-section.jpg)
|
||
|
||
The *StaffPage* template is also very straight forward.
|
||
|
||
**themes/tutorial/templates/Layout/StaffPage.ss**
|
||
|
||
:::ss
|
||
<% include Menu2 %>
|
||
|
||
<div id="Content" class="typography">
|
||
<% include Breadcrumbs %>
|
||
|
||
<div id="StaffPhoto">
|
||
$Photo.SetWidth(150)
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
$Content
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
Here we also use the *SetWidth* function to get a different sized image from the same source image. You should now have
|
||
a complete staff section.
|
||
|
||
![](_images/einstein.jpg)
|
||
|
||
## Summary
|
||
|
||
In this tutorial we have explored the concept of page types. In the process of creating and extending page types you
|
||
have been introduced to many of the concepts required to build a site with SilverStripe.
|
||
|
||
[Next Tutorial >>](3-forms)
|