From: Benjamin Auder Date: Fri, 22 Jul 2016 15:14:04 +0000 (+0200) Subject: after merging X-Git-Url: https://git.auder.net/variants/current/doc/css/app_dev.php/%3C?a=commitdiff_plain;h=5e8537e80ba92f2eab61e2b573ef3a9328d37349;p=sview.git after merging --- diff --git a/README.html b/README.html deleted file mode 100644 index 749d5c1..0000000 --- a/README.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,22 +0,0 @@ -

sview : tiny PHP web framework

- -

- It is inspired by a similar framework written by Arnór Heiðar Sigurðsson. - In the same spirit but more advanced and more complete, see also nanoc - in Ruby. -

- -

- sview is designed to organize essentially static websites. - It does not offer the features you would expect from a complete MVC framework - - actually, it has only the "V" part. - If you want a more demanding dynamic website, consider using an appropriate tool, - Symfony for example. -

- -

How to use it ?

- -

- The archive sample-website.tar.xz provides a basic but full website example. - Complementarily, the file HOWTO.html - gives some details about sview usage. -

diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..48b40ec --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,121 @@ +# sview : tiny PHP web framework + +It is inspired by [a similar framework](https://github.com/arnorhs/ShortPHP) written by Arnór Heiðar Sigurðsson. +In the same spirit but more advanced and more complete, see also [nanoc](http://nanoc.ws/) - in Ruby. + +sview is designed to organize essentially static websites. +It does not offer the features you would expect from a complete MVC framework - +actually, it has only the "V" part. +If you want a more demanding dynamic website, consider using an appropriate tool, +[Symfony](http://symfony.com/) for example. + +## How to use it ? + +The file sample-website.tar.xz provides a basic but full website example. +Alternatively, here are some details about sview usage. + +## 0. Installation + +In the following, I assume your website is located under http\[s\]://domain/topic/ +and is named "website" (adapt to your case). For example, in https://github.com/blog/ +domain = github.com and topic = blog. + +Get the source code either with `git clone` command or using a zip archive. +Copy all folder contents in the website/ folder : + + website/ + a/ + f/ + site/ + .htaccess + common.php + defaults.php + index.php + s.php + +* __a/__ (for "assets") is the folder for CSS files, images and javascript codes. + I like to put them respectively in css/, img/ and js/ folders, but the choice is yours. +* __f/__ (for "files") is the folder for any downloadable (or browsable) file you may upload. +* __site/__ is the main folder containing all your website pages. Three are already there : + * _404.php_ : the 404 error page; + * _dl.php_ : a script to download binary files; + * _home.php_ : the specifications for the welcome page. +* __.htaccess__ : its main job consists in routing everything that is not a resource to the index.php file. +* __common.php__ contains shared variables and functions to be used by at least two different pages. +* __defaults.php__ defines default variables for any web page, like the title or javascripts block. +* __index.php__ contains your website template, which is rendered for any web page + (and filled with specific values defined in pages under site/ folder; anything can be customized). +* __s.php__ consists in the framework code, loaded at the beginning of index.php. + +Now (online), in the .htaccess file, change the line `RewriteBase /` to `RewriteBase /topic`. + +## 1. Set default contents + +Edit the file defaults.php with +* A global title to your website; this title can later be mixed with a more specific page-based title, or be replaced. +* A list of references to CSS style sheets and pre-rendering javascripts, like ``. + We will see later how to refer to local style sheets (under a/css). +* Some javascript code which will be loaded by default after every page loads (e.g. [jQuery](http://jquery.com/). + +Each variable name is prepended with "b\_" to avoid potential conflicts with your own variables. + +## 2. Complete main pages + +### index.php + +Complete +* The menu (at commented location) +* The banner (near the menu, if you want one) +* The footer (if you don't want one, just drop it). + +You can also change the <meta> tags if needed. + +### site/home.php + +The welcome page. You can choose a title ($s\_title) or use the default one +(by not specifying anything). Style sheets and javascripts can be customized, ...etc. +Any default variable can be used to define a specific variable (prepended with "s\_"). + +### site/404.php + +Customize it; it is probably viewed more often than you think ;-) + +## 3. Write all other pages + +All pages are under site/ folder, and you can nest them in any directory tree. + +__Hint__ : if you don't want to load the main template, just end any site file with a PHP `exit` directive. + +Now we will see how to access pages and resources (images, CSS, files, javascript). + +--- + +## How to view a web page ? + +The page at physical location site/some\_folder/mypage.php is viewed in the web browser at the URL +http\[s\]://domain/topic/website/some\_folder/mypage (thanks to URL rewriting defined in the .htaccess file). + +Any page can be linked internally using the `r()` PHP function ('r' for "resource"), like in +the following : `