You're mixing up two distinct Rails feature: partials (using render
) and layouts (using yield
).
You can add a rails-like version of either (or both) of them to a Haml only program.
Partials
In a rails view, you can use render :partial_name
to cause the file _partial_name.html.haml
to be rendered at that point in the containing view (actually Rails allows you to use any templating language supported and it will find to correct filename extension to use, but I'll stick to just Haml here). Outside of Rails render
isn't available, but it can be added fairly easily.
A simple render
method would just find the appropriate haml file, render it, and return the html string for inclusion in the parent:
def render(partial)
# assuming we want to keep the rails practice of prefixing file names
# of partials with "_"
Haml::Engine.new(File.read("_#{partial}.html.haml")).render
end
The first argument to Haml::Engine.render
is a scope object, which we can use to add methods available inside the haml template. It defaults to Object.new
. In a simple case like this, however, we can define the render
method in the top level, and it will be available in the scope of the Haml template. We simply put our render
method in the script before the call to Haml::Engine.new(...).render
, and call it like this in our template:
!!!
%html
%head
%title Hello
%body
=render :the_partial
Now the file _the_partial.html.haml
will appear rendered at the appropriate point of the output.
Local variables
We can take this a step further. Rails allows you to pass in a hash of local variables to a partial. Haml will also accept a hash of variables to be passed as local variables, as the second argument to the Haml render
method. So if we expand our render method to look like:
def render(partial, locals = {})
Haml::Engine.new(File.read("_#{partial}.html.haml")).render(Object.new, locals)
end
we can use a partial that looks something like:
%p You passed in #{foo}
and call it from our template with:
%body
=render :partial, :foo => "bar"
which will render
<body>
<p>You passed in bar</p>
</body>
Layouts
In Rails, you can specify a layout for your views, so that all your pages can share the same
header, menu area etc. This is done by specifying a layout file, within which you call yield
to render the actual view in question. Layouts are slightly more tricky to add to haml, but can still be done.
Hamls render
method also accepts a block, so a simple solution would be to render the layout file, and pass a block that renders the view file:
Haml::Engine.new(File.read("layout.html.haml")).render do
Haml::Engine.new(File.read("view.html.haml")).render
end
This would give the contents of layout.html.haml
rendered with the contents of view.html.haml
rendered where the layout file contained =yield
.
content_for
Rails is a bit more flexible than that though. It allows you to call yield
multiple times in your layout file, naming a specific region in each case, and to specify the contents to be added at each region using the content_for
method within your views. So in your layout file:
!!!
%html
%head
= yield :title
%body
=yield
and in your view:
-content_for :title do
%title Hello
%p
Here's a paragraph.
The way Rails actually works is to render the view part first, storing all the different sections, and then rendering the layout, passing a block that provides the appropriate chunk whenever yield
is called in the layout. We can replicate this using a little helper class to provide the content_for
method and keep track of the rendered chunks for each region:
class Regions
def initialize
@regions_hash={}
end
def content_for(region, &blk)
@regions_hash[region] = capture_haml(&blk)
end
def [](region)
@regions_hash[region]
end
end
Here we're using the capture_haml
method to get the rendered haml without it going direct to the output. Note that this doesn't capture the unnamed part of the view.
We can now use our helper class to render the final output.
regions = Regions.new
unnamed = Haml::Engine.new(File.read("view_named.html.haml")).render(regions)
output = Haml::Engine.new(File.read("layout_named.html.haml")).render do |region|
region ? regions[region] : unnamed
end
Now the variable output
contains the final rendered output.
Note that the code here doesn't provide all the flexibility that's included with rails, but hopefully it's enough to show you where to start customising Haml to meet your needs.