<div class="book" id="${book?.id}">
<div>Title: ${book?.title}</div>
<div>Author: ${book?.author?.name}</div>
</div>
4 Views and Templates
Version: 6.2.1
4 Views and Templates
Grails also has the concept of templates. These are useful for partitioning your views into maintainable chunks, and combined with Layouts provide a highly re-usable mechanism for structured views.
Template Basics
Grails uses the convention of placing an underscore before the name of a view to identify it as a template. For example, you might have a template that renders Books located at grails-app/views/book/_bookTemplate.gsp
:
Use the render tag to render this template from one of the views in grails-app/views/book
:
<g:render template="bookTemplate" model="[book: myBook]" />
Notice how we pass into a model to use using the model
attribute of the render
tag. If you have multiple Book
instances you can also render the template for each Book
using the render tag with a collection
attribute:
<g:render template="bookTemplate" var="book" collection="${bookList}" />
Shared Templates
In the previous example we had a template that was specific to the BookController
and its views at grails-app/views/book
. However, you may want to share templates across your application.
In this case you can place them in the root views directory at grails-app/views or any subdirectory below that location, and then with the template attribute use an absolute location starting with /
instead of a relative location. For example if you had a template called grails-app/views/shared/_mySharedTemplate.gsp
, you would reference it as:
<g:render template="/shared/mySharedTemplate" />
You can also use this technique to reference templates in any directory from any view or controller:
<g:render template="/book/bookTemplate" model="[book: myBook]" />
The Template Namespace
Since templates are used so frequently there is template namespace, called tmpl
, available that makes using templates easier. Consider for example the following usage pattern:
<g:render template="bookTemplate" model="[book:myBook]" />
This can be expressed with the tmpl
namespace as follows:
<tmpl:bookTemplate book="${myBook}" />
Templates in Controllers and Tag Libraries
You can also render templates from controllers using the render controller method. This is useful for JavaScript heavy applications where you generate small HTML or data responses to partially update the current page instead of performing new request:
def bookData() {
def b = Book.get(params.id)
render(template:"bookTemplate", model:[book:b])
}
The render controller method writes directly to the response, which is the most common behaviour. To instead obtain the result of template as a String you can use the render tag:
def bookData() {
def b = Book.get(params.id)
String content = g.render(template:"bookTemplate", model:[book:b])
render content
}
Notice the usage of the g
namespace which tells Grails we want to use the tag as method call instead of the render method.