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-rw-r--r--user_guide_src/source/tutorial/static_pages.rst105
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 53 deletions
diff --git a/user_guide_src/source/tutorial/static_pages.rst b/user_guide_src/source/tutorial/static_pages.rst
index 8ba0486c1..53f286473 100644
--- a/user_guide_src/source/tutorial/static_pages.rst
+++ b/user_guide_src/source/tutorial/static_pages.rst
@@ -11,12 +11,16 @@ static pages. A controller is simply a class that helps delegate work.
It is the glue of your web application.
For example, when a call is made to:
-``http://example.com/news/latest/10`` We might imagine that there is a
-controller named "news". The method being called on news would be
-"latest". The news method's job could be to grab 10 news items, and
-render them on the page. Very often in MVC, you'll see URL patterns that
-match:
-``http://example.com/[controller-class]/[controller-method]/[arguments]``
+
+ http://example.com/news/latest/10
+
+We might imagine that there is a controller named "news". The method
+being called on news would be "latest". The news method's job could be to
+grab 10 news items, and render them on the page. Very often in MVC,
+you'll see URL patterns that match:
+
+ http://example.com/[controller-class]/[controller-method]/[arguments]
+
As URL schemes become more complex, this may change. But for now, this
is all we will need to know.
@@ -25,15 +29,13 @@ code.
::
- <?php
- class Pages extends CI_Controller {
+ <?php
+ class Pages extends CI_Controller {
- public function view($page = 'home')
- {
-
- }
-
- }
+ public function view($page = 'home')
+ {
+ }
+ }
You have created a class named "pages", with a view method that accepts
one argument named $page. The pages class is extending the
@@ -56,13 +58,13 @@ following code.
::
- <html>
- <head>
- <title>CodeIgniter Tutorial</title>
- </head>
- <body>
+ <html>
+ <head>
+ <title>CodeIgniter Tutorial</title>
+ </head>
+ <body>
- <h1>CodeIgniter Tutorial</h1>
+ <h1>CodeIgniter Tutorial</h1>
The header contains the basic HTML code that you'll want to display
before loading the main view, together with a heading. It will also
@@ -72,16 +74,16 @@ includes the following code:
::
- <em>&copy; 2014</em>
- </body>
- </html>
+ <em>&copy; 2014</em>
+ </body>
+ </html>
Adding logic to the controller
------------------------------
-Earlier you set up a controller with a view() method. The method accepts
-one parameter, which is the name of the page to be loaded. The static
-page templates will be located in the application/views/pages/
+Earlier you set up a controller with a ``view()`` method. The method
+accepts one parameter, which is the name of the page to be loaded. The
+static page templates will be located in the application/views/pages/
directory.
In that directory, create two files named home.php and about.php. Within
@@ -93,43 +95,40 @@ page actually exists:
::
- <?php
- public function view($page = 'home')
- {
-
- if ( ! file_exists(APPPATH.'/views/pages/'.$page.'.php'))
- {
- // Whoops, we don't have a page for that!
- show_404();
- }
-
- $data['title'] = ucfirst($page); // Capitalize the first letter
-
- $this->load->view('templates/header', $data);
- $this->load->view('pages/'.$page, $data);
- $this->load->view('templates/footer', $data);
-
- }
+ public function view($page = 'home')
+ {
+ if ( ! file_exists(APPPATH.'/views/pages/'.$page.'.php'))
+ {
+ // Whoops, we don't have a page for that!
+ show_404();
+ }
+
+ $data['title'] = ucfirst($page); // Capitalize the first letter
+
+ $this->load->view('templates/header', $data);
+ $this->load->view('pages/'.$page, $data);
+ $this->load->view('templates/footer', $data);
+ }
Now, when the page does exist, it is loaded, including the header and
footer, and displayed to the user. If the page doesn't exist, a "404
Page not found" error is shown.
The first line in this method checks whether the page actually exists.
-PHP's native file\_exists() function is used to check whether the file
-is where it's expected to be. show\_404() is a built-in CodeIgniter
+PHP's native ``file_exists()`` function is used to check whether the file
+is where it's expected to be. ``show_404()`` is a built-in CodeIgniter
function that renders the default error page.
-In the header template, the $title variable was used to customize the
+In the header template, the ``$title`` variable was used to customize the
page title. The value of title is defined in this method, but instead of
assigning the value to a variable, it is assigned to the title element
in the $data array.
The last thing that has to be done is loading the views in the order
-they should be displayed. The second parameter in the view() method is
-used to pass values to the view. Each value in the $data array is
+they should be displayed. The second parameter in the ``view()`` method is
+used to pass values to the view. Each value in the ``$data`` array is
assigned to a variable with the name of its key. So the value of
-$data['title'] in the controller is equivalent to $title in the view.
+``$data['title']`` in the controller is equivalent to $title in the view.
Routing
-------
@@ -149,8 +148,8 @@ all other code that sets any element in the $route array.
::
- $route['default_controller'] = 'pages/view';
- $route['(:any)'] = 'pages/view/$1';
+ $route['default_controller'] = 'pages/view';
+ $route['(:any)'] = 'pages/view/$1';
CodeIgniter reads its routing rules from top to bottom and routes the
request to the first matching rule. Each rule is a regular expression
@@ -163,8 +162,8 @@ More information about routing can be found in the URI Routing
`documentation <../general/routing.html>`_.
Here, the second rule in the $routes array matches **any** request using
-the wildcard string (:any). and passes the parameter to the view()
+the wildcard string (:any). and passes the parameter to the ``view()``
method of the pages class.
-Now visit index.php/about. Did it get routed correctly to the view()
+Now visit index.php/about. Did it get routed correctly to the ``view()``
method in the pages controller? Awesome!