Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago
Done in the Python version:
http://code.google.com/p/json-template/source/detail?r=286
Original comment by gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 26 Sep 2009 at 8:48
Done in JS and PHP too
Original comment by gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 7 Nov 2009 at 9:16
Original comment by gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 7 Nov 2009 at 9:16
Original comment by andyc...@gmail.com
on 9 Nov 2009 at 6:58
Assume:
{
"url-base": "http://example.com/music/",
"playlist-name": "Epic Playlist",
"songs": [
{
"url": "1.mp3",
"artist": "Grayceon",
"bandmembers": [
{
"name": "Joe Singer",
"intrument": "vocals"
},
{
"name": "Joe Drummer",
"intrument": "drums"
}
],
"title": "Sounds Like Thunder"
},
{
"url": "2.mp3",
"artist": "Thou",
"bandmembers": [
{
"name": "Joe Singer",
"intrument": "vocals"
},
{
"name": "Joe Drummer",
"intrument": "drums"
}
],
"title": "Their Hooves Carve Craters in the Earth"
}
]
}
and
var t = jsontemplate.Template("
{.section songs}\n
<h2>Songs in '{playlist-name}'</h2>\n\n
<table width=\"100%\">\n
{.repeated section @}\n
<tr>\n
<td><a href=\"{url-base|htmltag}{url|htmltag}\">Play</a>\n
<td><i>{title}</i></td>\n
{.section bandMembers\n
<td>{artist}<br />\n
<table width=\"100%\">\n
{.repeated section @}\n
<tr>\n
<td>{$index}</td>\n
<td><i>{intrument}</i></td>\n
<td>{name}</td>\n
</tr>\n
{.end}\n
</table>\n
</td>\n
{.end}\n
</tr>\n
{.end}\n
</table>\n
{.or}\n
<p><em>(No page content matches)</em></p>\n
{.end}\n");
Will $index return (1, 2) or (5, 6, 10, 11)? I mean is it an index for the
current
array or is it a gloabl index like $pos?
Is ther a $pos? I downloaded the latest for JavaScript and tested, got nothing
but
undefined errors.
Original comment by jfur...@wal-mart.com
on 9 Nov 2009 at 9:47
@index should return the topmost/innermost index thing. Each repeated section
starts
@index counting from 1.
I'm not sure where the 5/6 10,11 come from in your example. The behavior is
verified
in this test case.
http://chubot.org/json-template/test-cases/testTwoIndices-01.html
There is no @pos. If you mean @index then it might not be released yet. I'll
do a
release now since the code is stable.
Original comment by gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 10 Nov 2009 at 2:41
Yeah, that doesn't work. Error: exception thrown and not caught, debuger drops
me at
throw {
name: 'UndefinedVariable', message: name + ' is not defined'
}
Original comment by jfur...@wal-mart.com
on 10 Nov 2009 at 2:54
I just a released a new one a few minutes ago. It should work as its verified
by
tests. Note it's @index, not $index. This is parallel with @ for the cursor.
Original comment by gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 10 Nov 2009 at 2:55
Update worked right out of the box, thanks!!
Original comment by jfur...@wal-mart.com
on 10 Nov 2009 at 3:01
Hey, I just released an update of json-template.js with incompatible API
changes.
I doubt that you have used the APIs since they were not documented very well,
but I
would recommend updating.
Sorry if this caused any inconvenience, but I wanted to rename the methods to
comply
with common JavaScript style. I released 4 days ago without realizing that I
hadn't
done this yet.
It will affect you if you wrote formatters/predicates that accept a context
context.Lookup() --> context.get()
Or if you wrote any custom FunctionRegistry objects:
registry.Lookup --> registry.lookup()
Documented here: http://code.google.com/p/json-template/wiki/RecommendedApi
And committed here:
http://code.google.com/p/json-template/source/detail?r=e6b1d56a7796816d492dfcd9e
4c845b844510f4b
Original comment by gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 14 Nov 2009 at 8:40
How can i use @index to indicate odd and even columns in a table?
Original comment by maik.der...@googlemail.com
on 5 Jul 2015 at 11:32
Using @index with table ROWS is more conventional.
COLUMNS probably require <colgroup> and <col> tags. If the number of columns
is static (doesn't depend on template data), then you shouldn't need JSON
Template variables at all.
Most tables I've created have static columns.
Here is an example of @index,
http://chubot.org/json-template/test-cases/testIndex-01.html
You can add a formatter like this:
{@index|even-odd}
even-odd could be registered as a function that returns "blue" or "red"
depending on the value of @index.
There should be some examples of how to register formatters in the unit tests.
Original comment by andyc...@gmail.com
on 5 Jul 2015 at 6:55
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
gtempacc...@yahoo.com
on 22 Jul 2009 at 1:47