123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109 |
- = Known incompatibilities with Smarty 2 =
- == Syntax ==
- Smarty 3 API has a new syntax. Much of the Smarty 2 syntax is supported
- by a wrapper but deprecated. See the README that comes with Smarty 3 for more
- information.
- The {$array|@mod} syntax has always been a bit confusing, where an "@" is required
- to apply a modifier to an array instead of the individual elements. Normally you
- always want the modifier to apply to the variable regardless of its type. In Smarty 3,
- {$array|mod} and {$array|@mod} behave identical. It is safe to drop the "@" and the
- modifier will still apply to the array. If you really want the modifier to apply to
- each array element, you must loop the array in-template, or use a custom modifier that
- supports array iteration. Most smarty functions already escape values where necessary
- such as {html_options}
- == PHP Version ==
- Smarty 3 is PHP 5 only. It will not work with PHP 4.
- == {php} Tag ==
- The {php} tag is disabled by default. The use of {php} tags is
- deprecated. It can be enabled with $smarty->allow_php_tag=true.
- But if you scatter PHP code which belongs together into several
- {php} tags it may not work any longer.
- == Delimiters and whitespace ==
- Delimiters surrounded by whitespace are no longer treated as Smarty tags.
- Therefore, { foo } will not compile as a tag, you must use {foo}. This change
- Makes Javascript/CSS easier to work with, eliminating the need for {literal}.
- This can be disabled by setting $smarty->auto_literal = false;
- == Unquoted Strings ==
- Smarty 2 was a bit more forgiving (and ambiguous) when it comes to unquoted strings
- in parameters. Smarty3 is more restrictive. You can still pass strings without quotes
- so long as they contain no special characters. (anything outside of A-Za-z0-9_)
- For example filename strings must be quoted
- <source lang="smarty">
- {include file='path/foo.tpl'}
- </source>
- == Extending the Smarty class ==
- Smarty 3 makes use of the __construct method for initialization. If you are extending
- the Smarty class, its constructor is not called implicitly if the your child class defines
- its own constructor. In order to run Smarty's constructor, a call to parent::__construct()
- within your child constructor is required.
- <source lang="php">
- class MySmarty extends Smarty {
- function __construct() {
- parent::__construct();
-
- // your initialization code goes here
- }
- }
- </source>
- == Autoloader ==
- Smarty 3 does register its own autoloader with spl_autoload_register. If your code has
- an existing __autoload function then this function must be explicitly registered on
- the __autoload stack. See http://us3.php.net/manual/en/function.spl-autoload-register.php
- for further details.
- == Plugin Filenames ==
- Smarty 3 optionally supports the PHP spl_autoloader. The autoloader requires filenames
- to be lower case. Because of this, Smarty plugin file names must also be lowercase.
- In Smarty 2, mixed case file names did work.
- == Scope of Special Smarty Variables ==
- In Smarty 2 the special Smarty variables $smarty.section... and $smarty.foreach...
- had global scope. If you had loops with the same name in subtemplates you could accidentally
- overwrite values of parent template.
- In Smarty 3 these special Smarty variable have only local scope in the template which
- is defining the loop. If you need their value in a subtemplate you have to pass them
- as parameter.
- <source lang="smarty">
- {include file='path/foo.tpl' index=$smarty.section.foo.index}
- </source>
- == SMARTY_RESOURCE_CHAR_SET ==
- Smarty 3 sets the constant SMARTY_RESOURCE_CHAR_SET to utf-8 as default template charset.
- This is now used also on modifiers like escape as default charset. If your templates use
- other charsets make sure that you define the constant accordingly. Otherwise you may not
- get any output.
- == newline at {if} tags ==
- A \n was added to the compiled code of the {if},{else},{elseif},{/if} tags to get output of newlines as expected by the template source.
- If one of the {if} tags is at the line end you will now get a newline in the HTML output.
- == trigger_error() ==
- The API function trigger_error() has been removed because it did just map to PHP trigger_error.
- However it's still included in the Smarty2 API wrapper.
- == Smarty constants ==
- The constants
- SMARTY_PHP_PASSTHRU
- SMARTY_PHP_QUOTE
- SMARTY_PHP_REMOVE
- SMARTY_PHP_ALLOW
- have been replaced with class constants
- Smarty::PHP_PASSTHRU
- Smarty::PHP_QUOTE
- Smarty::PHP_REMOVE
- Smarty::PHP_ALLOW
|