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NAMEJifty::Manual::Tutorial - Zero to Jifty in a JiffyDESCRIPTIONThis tutorial should give you everything you need to build your first application with Jifty.HOW TOThe requirementsHere's what you need to have installed -- at least when we write it.Installing JiftyNo bones about it. We believe pretty strongly in the DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself) principle. That's one of the big reasons we love Perl and CPAN. Jifty makes use of lots of amazing code from CPAN. At last count, it directly depended on 100 packages from CPAN. Most of these libraries are cross-platform pure-Perl packages and should run great out of the box on any platform you can get Perl onto.We've gone to lengths to make sure you don't spend your day downloading library after library by bundling everything we can inside the Jifty package. The Jifty installer is capable of determining what modules your system needs, and downloading and installing them all in one go. Don't worry, it will ask you first before it makes any changes. On most systems you can use Perl's bundled CPAN module to download and install Jifty: # perl -MCPAN -e'install Jifty' If you've downloaded a ".tar.gz" of Jifty, you can do a manual install: # tar xzvf jifty-<version>.tgz # cd jifty-<version> # perl Makefile.PL # make # make test # make install If the tests don't pass, we want to hear about it. Please join us on "jifty-devel@lists.jifty.org" and report the failure. (See "GETTING HELP" below for info on how to join the list.) Setting up the ScaffoldingOnce you have Jifty happily installed, you're ready to create your first application.All you really need to make an application go is a copy of the jifty command-line tool (inside your new application's bin/ directory.) Of course, it's often helpful to have a bit more structure around to help guide your work. Jifty comes with tools to build that structure for you. Change directory to some place it will be safe to create a new Jifty application. (Jifty will create a subdirectory for you.) # jifty app --name MyWeblog Creating new application MyWeblog Creating directory MyWeblog/lib Creating directory MyWeblog/lib/MyWeblog Creating directory MyWeblog/bin Creating directory MyWeblog/etc Creating directory MyWeblog/doc Creating directory MyWeblog/log Creating directory MyWeblog/var Creating directory MyWeblog/var/mason Creating directory MyWeblog/share Creating directory MyWeblog/share/po Creating directory MyWeblog/share/web Creating directory MyWeblog/share/web/templates Creating directory MyWeblog/share/web/static Creating directory MyWeblog/lib/MyWeblog/Model Creating directory MyWeblog/lib/MyWeblog/Action Creating directory MyWeblog/t Creating configuration file MyWeblog/etc/config.yml Let's take those one by one.
Building your data modelAs you might imagine by the fact that this tutorial application is named MyWeblog, the example here is a simple weblog application. Future tutorials will add authentication, comments, and RSS and Atom feeds.Posts Weblogs tend to center around posts, so it's no surprise that the first model to create is the "post": # cd MyWeblog # jifty model --name Post Writing file /tmp/MyWeblog/lib/MyWeblog/Model/Post.pm Writing file /tmp/MyWeblog/t/00-model-Post.t Great! Now you have a Post model (not that it models anything yet). Open lib/MyWeblog/Model/Post.pm in your favorite text editor. You should see something like this: use strict; use warnings; package MyWeblog::Model::Post; use Jifty::DBI::Schema; use MyWeblog::Record schema { }; # Your model-specific methods go here. 1; Now it's time to tell the model class about what comprises a post. We'll start out by giving our post a "body" and a "title". (In a future tutorial, the application will become fully folksonomy-compliant by adding a "category" and upgrading that "category" to a "tags" table.) Position your cursor right after: use MyWeblog::Record schema { Add the lines: column title => type is 'text', label is 'Title', default is 'Untitled post'; column body => type is 'text', label is 'Content', render as 'Textarea'; Save your model class. Don't be mistaken, these are lines of actual Perl code. Jifty provides you with a human-readable language for declaring your models' columns. Starting the Jifty application serverYou now have a working, if simplistic, application. Start up the Jifty web server by typing "jifty server". For some platforms, you may have to type "./bin/jifty server".The first thing you'll see is that Jifty notices you have no database, so it creates one for you. By default, Jifty sets up your application with the SQLite database engine. If you'd rather use PostgreSQL or MySQL, you need to add some content to etc/config.yml. See Jifty::Config for a bit more information. # jifty server WARN - Application schema has no version in the database. WARN - Automatically creating your database. INFO - Generating SQL for application MyWeblog... INFO - Using MyWeblog::Model::Post, as it appears to be new. INFO - Using Jifty::Model::Session, as it appears to be new. INFO - Using Jifty::Model::Metadata, as it appears to be new. INFO - Set up version 0.0.1, jifty version 0.81208 INFO - You can connect to your server at http://localhost:8888/ Everything but the last line was database setup information that you'll only see when Jifty changes your database. The last line tells you the URL you can go to with your web browser. Have a look around. Be sure to check out the AJAX-enabled administrative UI, the online documentation browser, and the Pony. Building a user interfaceThe administrative web does give you everything you need to work with your application's data. You can create, update, and delete posts. However, it's not much of a weblog.Posting Let's start building our user interface with a page to create new posts. Open a new file called lib/MyWeblog/View.pm in your text editor. Make it look like this: package MyWeblog::View; use strict; use warnings; use Jifty::View::Declare -base; template post => page { title => 'Post Entry' } content { my $action = new_action(class => 'CreatePost'); form { render_action $action; form_submit(label => 'Post'); } }; 1; Jifty provides very concise syntax for generating HTML using Template::Declare. We'll see plenty more soon. Viewing It's really easy to get a basic listing of entries and a little bit more complex to get a pretty AJAXified paged list. Here's how to do both; you can decide which one works best for you. The quick and dirty way Open your lib/MyWeblog/View.pm file and add this between the "post" template and the "1;" at the very end of the file: template '/' => page { # Get all posts. my $posts = MyWeblog::Model::PostCollection->new; $posts->unlimit; # Display each post in a <dl>. dl { while (my $post = $posts->next) { dt { $post->title } dd { $post->body } } } }; Now when you go to "http://localhost:8888", you'll be greeted with all of your blog posts. The complex way that gets you lots of cool toys The complex way involves using one of Jifty's advanced features: Page regions. These regions let your application reload page sections independently, either using AJAX on modern high-end browsers or regular GET requests with downlevel browsers such as "lynx" and "w3m". The downside of this approach is that each separate region needs to live in its own template. Happily, this is a good design practice even without regions. The complex way starts off about the same as the easy way. Replace (or add, if you shied away from simplicity) the "/" template in your lib/MyWeblog/View.pm: template '/' => page { render_region( name => 'myweblog-posts', path => '/fragments/page_of_posts', ); }; If you're on the ball, you've probably already guessed that you need to create a template called "/fragments/page_of_posts" in your lib/MyWeblog/View.pm. Make it contain the following: template '/fragments/page_of_posts' => sub { # Retrieve the current page argument, defaulting to 1. my $page = get('page') || 1; # Get all posts. my $posts = MyWeblog::Model::PostCollection->new; $posts->unlimit; # Display up to three posts on the current page. $posts->set_page_info( current_page => $page, per_page => 3, ); # Notify the user what page they're on if there are multiple. if ($posts->pager->last_page > 1) { p { "Page $page of " . $posts->pager->last_page } } # Display the current page of posts. dl { attr { class => 'list' }; while (my $post = $posts->next) { dt { $post->title } dd { $post->body } } }; # Previous page link, the 'page' argument here will set a new value when # this region is invoked again. if ($posts->pager->previous_page) { hyperlink( label => 'Previous Page', onclick => { args => { page => $posts->pager->previous_page, }, }, ); } # Next page link. if ($posts->pager->next_page) { hyperlink( label => 'Next Page', onclick => { args => { page => $posts->pager->next_page, }, }, ); } }; Now fire up your Jifty webserver again. Browse to "/post" and create more than three posts. Return to the home page and check out the nifty AJAX "Next Page" and "Previous Page" links you now have. Turn off JavaScript or view the page in "lynx", and notice how the AJAX automatically falls-back to page loads for you. All for free, thanks to Jifty! Hey, where did that class come from? You may have wondered about "MyWeblog::Model::PostCollection", since there's no file called PostCollection.pm. Jifty uses Jifty::ClassLoader to auto-generate a bunch of classes for you. Of course, you can override these definitions if you like. See Jifty::ClassLoader for more details. NavigationOf course, having to remember the URL to get to the posting page is a bit annoying. To get a Post button in the menu, you need to override the default menus.We're going to set up a dispatcher for your weblog. A dispatcher handles "doing things" based on the URL of each incoming request. We can set up additional menu items by adding them in a "before rendering any template" dispatcher rule. Open up a new file called lib/MyWeblog/Dispatcher.pm and stick this content into it: package MyWeblog::Dispatcher; use strict; use warnings; use Jifty::Dispatcher -base; before '*' => run { my $top = Jifty->web->navigation; $top->child(Home => url => '/'); $top->child(Post => url => '/post', label => 'Post Article'); }; 1; Jifty provides nice syntax (yet again!) for declaring dispatcher rules. For more information about dispatching, see Jifty::Dispatcher. For more information about the menu system, see the documentation in Jifty::Web::Menu. That's it!That's just about everything you need to get started building Jifty applications. We're working hard to make Jifty even easier to use and to obsolete the hard bits of this tutorial as quickly as we can.Please join us on the "jifty-devel" mailing list to talk about how you're using Jifty or what you find difficult or hard to use about it. MORE TUTORIALS
GETTING HELPOnline HelpThe "jifty" command-line application comes with builtin help.jifty help jifty help <command> If your server is running with administration mode enabled (the configuration file "AdminMode" setting is missing or non-zero), you can click the "Online Docs" link in your browser for an extensive list of per-module Jifty documentation. Joining the mailing list"jifty-devel@lists.jifty.org" is where we discuss how we're building Jifty, what we're having trouble with and so on.To join the list, send mail to "jifty-devel-subscribe@lists.jifty.org". Browsing the wikiWe have a wiki! (Actually, the wiki is Jifty's primary website)Please visit <http://jifty.org/>, browse and contribute. The wiki is powered by Wifty, a Wiki built on Jifty. Its code is freely available from the Jifty subversion repository. REPORTING BUGSPlease report bugs in Jifty to "jifty-devel@lists.jifty.org".
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