ViewHelpers

How to use ViewHelpers

ViewHelpers are special tags in the template which provide more complex functionality such as loops or special formatting of values. The functionality of a ViewHelper is implemented in PHP, and each ViewHelper has its own PHP class.

See the ViewHelper Reference for a complete list of all available ViewHelpers.

Within Fluid, the ViewHelper is used as a special HTML element with a namespace prefix, for example the namespace prefix f is used for ViewHelpers from the built-in Fluid namespace:

<f:for each="{results}" as="result">
   <li>{result.title}</li>
</f:for>
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The f namespace is already defined, but can be explicitly specified to improve IDE autocompletion.

Custom ViewHelpers use their own namespace, in this case blog:

<blog:myViewHelper argument1="something" />
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The namespace needs to be registered explicitly, see the next section.

ViewHelpers can accept input values both from their tag content and from arguments, which are specified as tag attributes. The ViewHelper syntax is documented in Fluid ViewHelper Syntax.

Registering/importing ViewHelpers

When you need to use third-party ViewHelpers in your templates, there are multiple equally valid options.

You can use the PHP API to register a namespace that should be available in all template files without further importing:

$view = new TemplateView();
$view->getRenderingContext()->getViewHelperResolver()
    ->addNamespace('foo', 'Vendor\\Foo\\ViewHelpers');
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To make a namespace only available in one template file, the following syntax variants are possible:

<!-- xmlns variant -->
<html
    xmlns:foo="http://typo3.org/ns/Vendor/Foo/ViewHelpers"
    data-namespace-typo3-fluid="true"
>

<!-- inline variant -->
{namespace foo=Vendor\Foo\ViewHelpers}
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Once you have registered/imported the ViewHelper collection, you can start using it in your templates via the namespace alias you used during registration (in this example: foo is the alias name).

Tag-based ViewHelpers

Tag-based ViewHelpers are special ViewHelpers that extend a different base class called AbstractTagBasedViewHelper. The purpose of these special ViewHelpers is to generate a HTML tag based on the supplied arguments and content.

Tag-based ViewHelpers provide default arguments that help enhancing the generated HTML tag:

  • An array of data-* attributes can be provided via the data argument
  • An array of aria-* attributes can be provided via the aria argument
  • An array of additional HTML attributes can be provided via the additionalAttributes argument
  • You can also supply arbitrary arguments that don't need to be defined by the ViewHelper, which will be added to the generated HTML tag automatically

Example:

<my:viewHelper
    data="{
        foo: 'data foo',
        bar: 'data bar',
    }"
    aria="{
        label: 'my label',
    }"
    additionalAttributes="{
        'my-attribute': 'my attribute value',
    }"
    another-attribute="my other value"
>
    content
</my:viewHelper>
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Assuming that the ViewHelper is configured to create a <div> tag, this would be the result:

<div
    data-foo="data foo"
    data-bar="data bar"
    aria-label="my label"
    my-attribute="my attribute value"
    another-attribute="my other value"
>
    content
</div>
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Boolean attributes

You can use the boolean literals {true} and {false} to enable or disable attributes of tag-based ViewHelpers:

<my:viewHelper async="{true}" />
Result: <div async="async" />

<my:viewHelper async="{false}" />
Result: <div />
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Of course, any variable containing a boolean can be supplied as well:

<my:viewHelper async="{isAsync}" />
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It is also possible to cast a string to a boolean:

<my:viewHelper async="{myString as boolean}" />
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For backwards compatibility, empty strings still lead to the attribute being omitted from the tag:

<f:variable name="myEmptyString" value="" />
<my:viewHelper async="{myEmptyString}" />
Result: <div />
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Condition ViewHelpers

Condition ViewHelpers are another special type of ViewHelper that allow to check for certain conditions within a template. They extend from a different base class called AbstractConditionViewHelper.

All condition ViewHelpers have in common that a then and one or multiple else clauses can be defined. There are multiple ways to do this, and almost all combinations imaginable are possible.

The generic and most used condition ViewHelper is <f:if>.

then/else as argument

You can define then and else as ViewHelper arguments:

<!-- then and else -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'" then="variable is test" else="variable is something else" />
{f:if(condition: '{myVar} == \'test\'', then: 'variable is test', else: 'variable is something else')}

<!-- only then -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'" then="variable is test" />
{f:if(condition: '{myVar} == \'test\'', then: 'variable is test')}

<!-- only else -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'" else="variable is something else" />
{f:if(condition: '{myVar} == \'test\'', else: 'variable is something else')}
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then/else as child ViewHelpers

With the tag syntax, it is also possible to define more advanced conditions:

<!-- only then -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'">
    variable is test
</f:if>

<!-- then and else -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'">
    <f:then>variable is test</f:then>
    <f:else>variable is something else</f:else>
</f:if>

<!-- only else -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'">
    <f:else>variable is something else</f:else>
</f:if>

<!-- multiple else-if -->
<f:if condition="{myVar} == 'test'">
    <f:then>variable is test</f:then>
    <f:else if="{myVar} == 'foo'">variable is foo</f:else>
    <f:else if="{myVar} == 'bar'">variable is bar</f:else>
    <f:else>variable is something else</f:else>
</f:if>
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Get verdict by omitting then/else

New in version Fluid 4.1

If neither then nor else in any of the accepted forms is specified, the ViewHelper returns the verdict of the condition as boolean. This value can be used for further processing in the template, for example in complex conditions:

<!-- The variable will contain the result of the condition as boolean -->
<f:variable
    name="isEitherTestOrFoo"
    value="{f:if(condition: '{myVar} == \'test\' || {myVar} == \'foo\'')}"
/>

<!-- This example combines two custom condition ViewHelpers to a larger condition -->
<f:if condition="{my:customCondition(value: variableToCheck)} || {my:otherCondition(value: variableToCheck)}">
    ...
</f:if>
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This syntax can also be helpful in combination with a Tag-Based ViewHelper:

<!-- disabled attribute is set if either no first name or no last name is set -->
<my:tagBased
    disabled="{f:if(condition: '!{firstName} || !{lastName}')}"
/>
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Understanding ViewHelpers

All built-in ViewHelpers are documented in the ViewHelper Reference. If you want to learn more about a specific ViewHelper or if you are using a custom ViewHelper that isn't documented, you can take a look at the ViewHelper source code, written in PHP.

Each ViewHelper has a corresponding PHP file, which contains a class that describes the ViewHelper's arguments as well as its behavior in the template. Such classes are usually placed in the Vendor\Package\ViewHelpers PHP namespace (where Vendor and Package are placeholders for actual values) and follow the following naming convention:

  • f:format.raw results from the PHP class TYPO3Fluid\Fluid\ViewHelpers\Format\RawViewHelper
  • f:render results from the PHP class TYPO3Fluid\Fluid\ViewHelpers\RenderViewHelper
  • mypkg:custom.specialFormat results from the PHP class My\Package\ViewHelpers\Custom\SpecialFormatViewHelper, assuming you added xmlns:mpkg="http://typo3.org/ns/My/Package/ViewHelpers" or an alternative namespace registration (see above).

The arguments a ViewHelper supports will be verbosely registered in the initializeArguments() function of each ViewHelper class. Inspect this method to see the names, types, descriptions, required flags and default values of all attributes. An example argument definition looks like this:

public function initializeArguments() {
    $this->registerArgument('myArgument', 'boolean', 'If true, makes ViewHelper do foobar', false, false);
}
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Which translated to human terms means that we:

  • Register an argument named myArgument
  • Specify that it must be a boolean value or an expression resulting in a boolean value (see Boolean conditions). Other valid types are integer, string, float, array, object, DateTime and other class names. The array of syntax can also be used, for example string[] or Vendor\Package\MyClass[].
  • Describe the argument's behavior in simple terms.
  • Define that the argument is not required (the 4th argument is false).
  • Set a default value of false (5th argument), if the argument is not provided when calling the ViewHelper.

The ViewHelper itself would then be callable like this:

<mypkg:custom.specialFormat myArgument="{true}">{someVariable}</mypkg:custom.specialFormat>
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What the ViewHelper does with its input values is determined by the render() method in the ViewHelper class.