icybee/module-editor

Provides an API to manage and use editors, as well as several editors.

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Language:JavaScript

Type:icanboogie-module

3.0.x-dev 2017-03-06 14:15 UTC

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Last update: 2024-12-20 03:53:39 UTC


README

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The Editor module (editor) provides an API to manage and use editors, and comes with several editors.

Different editors are used to enter the contents of the CMS Icybee. Whether it's the body of an article or its excerpt, the description of a file, the content of a page… from the simplest string to the different elements of a schema, or some element with rich text. These editors allow the user to enter varied types of content. They are also used to select images, records, forms, the view to display as the body of a page, and many other things.

The following editors are provided by the module:

  • rte - A Rich Text Editor.
  • textmark - An editor for the TextMark/Markdown syntax.
  • image - A selector for a managed image.
  • node - A selector for a node.
  • patron - An editor for the Patron template engine.
  • php - An editor for PHP code.
  • raw - Lets you use HTML code.
  • tabbable - An editor with tabbed content, where each tab can use its own editor.
  • widgets - An editor that lets you pick and sort widgets.

Editors

The API provided by the module defines the interface common to all editors. They must be able to serialize/unserialize and render the content type they support. They also must provide the UI element used to edit that content. For instance, this is the TextEditor class that provides the text editor:

<?php

namespace ICanBoogie\Modules\Editor;

class TextEditor implements Editor
{
	public function serialize($content)
	{
		return $content;
	}

	public function unserialize($serialized_content)
	{
		return $serialized_content;
	}

	public function render($content)
	{
		return $content;
	}

	public function from(array $attributes)
	{
		return new TextEditorElement($attributes);
	}
}

Because the content type supported by this editor is very basic, the (un)serialize and render methods are very simple. Editors supporting more complex content types may use arrays and serialize their content using JSON.

Serialize and unserialize

The serialize() method is used to transform the internal representation of the content type supported by the editor into a plain string that can be easily stored in a database:

<?php

namespace ICanBoogie\Modules\Editor;

$content = "Madonna!";
$editor = new TextEditor;
$serialized_content = $editor->serialize($content);

// the serialized content can be stored in the database 

Editors only work with unserialized contents. If the content is to be rendered or used as the value of a UI element, it needs to be unserialized:

<?php

namespace ICanBoogie\Modules\Editor;

// $serialized_content is coming from the database

$editor = new TextEditor;
$content = $editor->unserialize($serialized_content);
$rendered_content = $editor->render($content);

Rendering content

Content is rendered using the render() method, which returns a string, or an object that can be used as a string. For instance, the render() method of the image editor takes the identifier of an image and returns an active record that is rendered into an IMG element when used as a string.

Thus, if the editor is asked to render the content, an active record is returned. Used as a string the active record is rendered as an HTML string. But it could be used to obtain a thumbnail instead:

<?php

namespace ICanBoogie\Modules\Editor;

$editor = new ImageEditor;
$image = $editor->render('12');

if ($image)
{
    echo $image->thumbnail('article-view');
}

GUI element

Each editor provides a GUI element that is used to edit the supported content type. The element is created using the from() method. For instance, TextEditor creates instances of TextEditorElement:

<?php

namespace ICanBoogie\Modules\Editor;

class TextEditor implements Editor
{
    // …

    public function from(array $attributes)
    {
        return new TextEditorElement($attributes);
    }
}
<?php

namespace ICanBoogie\Modules\Editor;

class TextEditorElement extends \Brickrouge\Text implements EditorElement
{
    public function __construct(array $attributes = [])
    {
        parent::__construct($attributes + [
        
            'class' => 'editor editor--raw'
            
        ]);
    }
}

The UI element must be instances of the Element class, or one of its subclasses. For instance, TextEditorElement extends Text which extends Element. The many attributes of the Element class can be used to obtain a satisfactory element:

<?php

use Brickrouge\Element;
use Brickrouge\Group;

$editor = new TextEditor;
$element = $editor->from([

    Group::LABEL => 'Title',
    Element::REQUIRED => true,
    
    'name' => 'title',
    'value' => $editor->unserialize($serialized_content)
    
]);

Note that the content is specified to the GUI element using the value attribute.

Editor collection

An editor collection contains the definition of the available editors. It is used to instantiate editors, and by extension their GUI element:

<?php

namespace Icybee\Modules\Editor;

use Brickrouge\Group;
use Brickrouge\Element;

$editors = new Collection([
	
	'rte' => RTEEditor::class,
	'textmark' => TextmarkEditor::class,
	'raw' => RawEditor::class,

]);

$editor = $editors['rte'];

$editor_element = $editors['rte']->from([

	Group::LABEL => "Body",
	Element::REQUIRED => true

]);

An editor definition can be modified until it has been used to instantiate an editor. A EditorAlreadyInstantiated exception is thrown in attempt to modify a definition that was used to instantiate an editor. The EditorNotDefined exception is thrown in attempt to obtain an editor whose definition is not defined.

The core collection

Although custom collections can be created to manage editors, it is recommended to use the core collection which is attached to the core object through a lazy getter:

<?php

$app->editors;

$editor = $app->editors['rte'];

$editor_element = $app->editors['rte']->from([
	Group::LABEL => "Body",
	Element::REQUIRED => true
]);

This collection is created from the editors config and can be altered by attaching an event hook to the Icybee\Modules\Editor\Collection::alter event.

Defining the editors of the core collection

The editors config is used to define the editors of the core collection. It is recommended to define editors this way, unless you don't want an editor to be available to the whole CMS.

<?php

namespace Icybee\Modules\Editor;

return [

	'rte' => RTEEditor::class,
	'textmark' => TextmarkEditor::class,
	'raw' => RawEditor::class,
	'text' => TextEditor::class,
	'patron' => PatronEditor::class,
	'php' => PHPEditor::class,
	'image' => ImageEditor::class,
	'node' => NodeEditor::class,
	'widgets' => WidgetsEditor::class,
	'tabbable' => TabbableEditor::class

];

Altering the core collection

Third parties may use the The Icybee\Modules\Editor\Collection::alter event of class Icybee\Modules\Editor\Collection\AlterEvent to alter the core collection once it has been created with the editors config.

<?php

use Icybee\Modules\Editor\Collection;

$app->events->attach(function(Collection\AlterEvent $event, Collection $target) {

	$target['rte'] = 'MyRTEEditor';

});

A multi-editor

Having so many editors to play with is very nice and it would be a shame to provide only an RTE editor when a Markdown editor or a raw HTML editor could also be used, if not prefered by the user. In order to answer to this situation, the module provides a multi-editor, a shell that can swap editors to edit content.

The Contents module uses this editor so that the user can decide which editor to use to edit and render its content:

<?php

namespace Icybee\Modules\Contents;

// …

use Icybee\Modules\Editor\MultiEditorElement;

class EditBlock extends \Icybee\Modules\Nodes\EditBlock
{
	protected function get_children()
	{
		// …
		
		Content::BODY => new MultiEditorElement($values['editor'] ? $values['editor'] : $default_editor, [
			
			Element::LABEL_MISSING => 'Contents',
			Element::GROUP => 'contents',
			Element::REQUIRED => true,

			'rows' => 16
			
		])
		
		// …
	}
}

The tabbable editor uses this editor for each of its tabs, allowing the user to use an RTE editor in the first, a Markdown editor is the second and a tabbable editor in the third (Inception !).

Currently using the multi-editor requires an extra field to store the editor configured by the user. Its name can be specified using the SELECTOR_NAME attribute, it defaults to editor.

Requirement

The package requires PHP 5.5 or later.

Installation

The recommended way to install this package is through Composer. Create a composer.json file and run php composer.phar install command to install it:

$ composer require icybee/module-editor

Note: This module is part of the modules required by Icybee.

Cloning the repository

The package is available on GitHub, its repository can be cloned with the following command line:

$ git clone git://github.com/Icybee/module-editor.git editor

Testing

The test suite is ran with the make test command. Composer is automatically installed as well as all the dependencies required to run the suite. The package directory can later be cleaned with the make clean command.

The package is continuously tested by Travis CI.

Build Status Code Coverage

Documentation

The package is documented as part of the Icybee CMS documentation. The documentation for the package and its dependencies can be generated with the make doc command. The documentation is generated in the docs directory using ApiGen. The package directory can later by cleaned with the make clean command.

License

The module is licensed under the New BSD License - See the LICENSE file for details.