Book Image

Plone 3 Theming

Book Image

Plone 3 Theming

Overview of this book

Themes are among the most powerful features that can be used to customize a web site, especially in Plone. Using custom themes can help you brand your site for a particular corporate image; it ensures standards compliance and creates easily navigable layouts. But most Plone users still continue to use default themes as developing and deploying themes that are flexible and easily maintainable is not always straightforward. This book teaches best practices of Plone theme development, focusing on Plone 3. It provides you with all the information useful for creating a robust and flexible Plone theme. It also provides a sneak peek into the future of Plone's theming system. In this book you will learn how to create flexible, powerful, and professional Plone themes. It is a step-by-step tutorial on how to work with Plone themes. It also provides a more holistic look at how a real-world theme is constructed. We look at the tools required for theming a web site. The book covers major topics such as configuring the development environment, creating a basic theme product, add-on tools and skinning tricks, integrating multimedia with Plone, and configuring your site's look and feel through the Zope Management Interface (ZMI). Finally, the book takes a close look at the thrilling and greatly simplified future of theming Plone sites.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Plone 3 Theming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface

Built-in names in TALES


The following is a list of the names that are always available to TALES expressions in Zope, and which you may often see in your page templates. These are considered reserved words. You can read more about these here: http://wiki.zope.org/ZPT/TALESSpecification13.

  • nothing—a special value used to represent a non-value (for example, void, None, Nil, NULL).

  • default—a special name for the contents (data) of a tag. This is usually only used in tricky bits of code.

  • options—the keyword arguments passed to a template. These are generally available when a template is called from methods and scripts, rather than from the Web.

  • repeat—the repeat variables. See the tal:repeat documentation.

  • attrs—a dictionary containing the initial values of the attributes of the current statement tag. This is Uncommon.

  • here or context—the object to which the template is being applied.

  • container—the folder in which the template is located.

  • template—the template itself.

  • request—the publishing request...