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This widget allows the user to set multiple variables in one go.

It thereby reduces code complexity that would arise when setting
many variables using "<$set>".

```
\define helloworld() Hello world!
<$vars greeting="Hi" me={{!!title}} sentence=<<helloworld>>>
  <<greeting>>! I am <<me>> and I say: <<sentence>>
</$vars>
```

How this Widget differs from the set widget:

 * Variables may be created by using the "key=value" notation
   that you already know from widgets like action-setfield.
 * You cannot specify a fallback ("emptyValue")
 * You cannot use a filter to produce a conditional variable assignement

Original discussion that led to the creation of this widget:
https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/issues/1610
This commit is contained in:
Felix Hayashi 2015-04-26 13:33:56 +02:00
parent afb250cef3
commit 740627795f
2 changed files with 127 additions and 0 deletions

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/*\
title: $:/core/modules/widgets/vars.js
type: application/javascript
module-type: widget
This widget allows the user to set multiple variables in one go.
```
\define helloworld() Hello world!
<$vars greeting="Hi" me={{!!title}} sentence=<<helloworld>>>
<<greeting>>! I am <<me>> and I say: <<sentence>>
</$vars>
```
\*/
(function(){
/*jslint node: true, browser: true */
/*global $tw: false */
"use strict";
var Widget = require("$:/core/modules/widgets/widget.js").widget;
var VarsWidget = function(parseTreeNode,options) {
// Call the constructor
Widget.call(this);
// Initialise
this.initialise(parseTreeNode,options);
};
/*
Inherit from the base widget class
*/
VarsWidget.prototype = Object.create(Widget.prototype);
/*
Render this widget into the DOM
*/
VarsWidget.prototype.render = function(parent,nextSibling) {
this.parentDomNode = parent;
this.computeAttributes();
this.execute();
this.renderChildren(parent,nextSibling);
};
/*
Compute the internal state of the widget
*/
VarsWidget.prototype.execute = function() {
// Parse variables
var self = this;
$tw.utils.each(this.attributes,function(val,key) {
if(key.charAt(0) !== "$") {
self.setVariable(key,val);
}
});
// Construct the child widgets
this.makeChildWidgets();
};
/*
Refresh the widget by ensuring our attributes are up to date
*/
VarsWidget.prototype.refresh = function(changedTiddlers) {
var changedAttributes = this.computeAttributes();
if(Object.keys(changedAttributes).length) {
this.refreshSelf();
return true;
}
return this.refreshChildren(changedTiddlers);
};
exports["vars"] = VarsWidget;
})();

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title: VarsWidget
created: 20150426115958020
modified: 20150426115958020
tags: Widgets
caption: vars
! Introduction
The ''vars'' widget allows you to set multiple variables in one go. It thereby reduces code complexity that would arise when setting
many variables using the [[SetWidget]].
! Content and Attributes
The content of the `<$vars>` widget is the scope for the value assigned to the variable.
|!Attribute |!Description |
|//{attributes not starting with $}// |Each attribute name specifies a variable name. The attribute value is used as variable assignement |
! Examples
Consider a case where you need to set multiple variables.
Using the `<$vars>` widget, this situation may be handled in the following way:
```
\define helloworld() Hello world!
<$vars greeting="Hi" me={{!!title}} sentence=<<helloworld>>>
<<greeting>>! I am <<me>> and I say: <<sentence>>
</$vars>
```
In contrast, here is the same example, but using the `<$set>` widget instead:
```
<$set name="greeting" value="Hi" />
<$set name="me" value={{!!title}} />
<$set name="sentence" value=<<helloworld>> />
<<greeting>>! I am <<me>> and I say: <<sentence>>
</$set>
</$set>
</$set>
```
! Remarks
It should be noted that this widget differs from the set widget in the following ways:
* You cannot specify a fallback (also known as "emptyValue")
* You cannot use a filter to produce a conditional variable assignement