Where to place your view files and what to put in them.
We've talked previously about how the controller is responsible for deciding which view files to render to the user. Read the Rendering Content chapter if you need to refresh your memory about that topic.
In this chapter, we'll explain exactly where to place these files and what to put in them.
In the simplest case, your controller action (typically a function inside your controller CFC file) will have a view file associated with it. As explained in the Rendering Content chapter, this file will be included automatically at the end of the controller action code. So if you're running the show
action in the blog
controller, for example, Wheels will include the views/blog/show.cfm
file.
Some rules can be spotted here:
All view files live in the views
folder.
Each controller gets a subfolder named after it in the views
folder.
The view file to include is just a regular .cfm
file named after the action.
For creating standard pages, your work process will likely consist of the following steps:
Create the controller action (a function in the controller CFC file).
Create the corresponding view file for it (a .cfm
file in the controller's view folder).
There can be some exceptions to this process though, so let's go through some possible scenarios.
Not all controller actions need a corresponding view file. Consider the case where you process a form submission. To make sure it's not possible for the user to refresh the page and cause multiple submissions, you may choose to perform the form processing and then send the user directly to another page using the redirectTo() function.
Sometimes you want the controller action to render the view file for a different action than the one currently executing. This is especially common when your application processes a form and the user makes an input error. In this case, you'll probably choose to have your application display the same form again for correction.
In this case, you can use the renderView() function and specify a different action in the action
argument (which will include the view page for that action but not run the controller code for it).
Sometimes it's useful to have a view file that can be called from several controller actions. For these cases, you'll typically call renderView() with the template
argument.
When using the template
argument, there are specific rules that Wheels will follow in order to locate the file you want to include:
If the template argument starts with the /
character, Wheels will start searching from the root of the views
folder. Example: renderView(template="/common/page")
will include the views/common/page.cfm
file.
If it contains the /
character elsewhere in the string, the search will start from the controller's view folder. Example: renderView(template="misc/page")
will include the views/blog/misc/page.cfm
file if we're currently in the blog
controller.
In all other cases (i.e. when the template argument does not contain the /
character at all), Wheels will just assume the file is in the controller's view folder and try to include it. Example: renderView(template="something")
will include the views/blog/something.cfm
file if we're currently in the blog
controller.
Also note that both renderView(template="thepage")
and renderView(template="thepage.cfm")
work fine. But most of the time, Wheels developers will tend to leave out the .cfm
part.
This is the output of your application: what the users will see in their browsers. Most often this will consist of HTML, but it can also be JavaScript, CSS, XML, etc. You are of course free to use any CFML tags and functions that you want to in the file as well. (This is a CFML application, right?)
In addition to this normal code that you'll see in most ColdFusion applications—whether they are made for a framework or not—Wheels also gives you some nice constructs to help keep your code clean. The most important ones of these are Layouts , Partials, and Helpers.
When writing your view code, you will have access to the variables you have set up in the controller file. The idea is that the variables you want to access in the view should be set unscoped (or in the variables
scope if you prefer to set it explicitly) in the controller so that they are available to the view template.
In addition to the variables you have set yourself, you can also access the params
struct. This contains anything passed in through the URL or with a form. If you want to follow MVC rules more closely though, we recommend only accessing the params
struct in the controller and then setting new variables for the information you need access to in the view.
The most important thing to remember when creating your view is to be careful not to put too much code in there. Avoid code dealing with the incoming request (this can be moved to the controller) and code containing business logic (consider moving this to a model). If you have view-related code but too much of it, it may be beneficial to break it out into a helper or a partial.
A view's job is also to clean up and format the values provided by the controller before being displayed. This is especially important when content from a data source is not HTML-encoded.
For example, if the view is to display the title
column from a query object called posts
, it should encode HTML special characters:
Please note that you do not need to do this when passing in data to CFWheels view helpers. The view helpers themselves will handle calling EncodeForUrl
, EncodeForHtml
and EncodeForHtmlAttribute
internally as needed.
By "view helpers" we mean everything listed as such in the API reference, so be aware that global helpers, such as capitalize, humanize etc, do not encode the content you pass in. When in doubt, simply test by passing in a string and check the HTML source of the output to see whether CFWheels encoded it or not.
To control encoding in general you have three global settings at your disposal (they all default to true
):
encodeURLs
: When true
, calls EncodeForUrl
to encode parameter name and values in URLFor.
encodeHtmlTags
: When true
, calls EncodeForHtml
to encode tag content in linkTo, textAreaTag etc.
encodeHtmlAttributes
: When true
, calls EncodeForHtmlAttribute
to encode attribute values in linkTo, textAreaTag etc.
All individual functions also have their own encode
argument (can be set to true
/ false
or attributes
) that overrides the global setting. Setting it to attributes
will only encode HTML attribute values but leave tag content as is. Note that the attributes
option is not available on functions that don't produce any tag content (such as imageTag for example), in those cases it's enough to pass in either true
or false
.