Provided by: libtemplate-plugin-cycle-perl_1.06-1_all bug

NAME

       Template::Plugin::Cycle - Cyclically insert into a Template from a sequence of values

SYNOPSIS

         [% USE cycle('row', 'altrow') %]

         <table border="1">
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>First row</td>
           </tr>
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>Second row</td>
           </tr>
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>Third row</td>
           </tr>
         </table>

         ###################################################################
         # Alternatively, you might want to make it available to all templates
         # throughout an entire application.

         use Template::Plugin::Cycle;

         # Create a Cycle object and set some values
         my $Cycle = Template::Plugin::Cycle->new;
         $Cycle->init('normalrow', 'alternaterow');

         # Bind the Cycle object into the Template
         $Template->process( 'tablepage.html', class => $Cycle );

         #######################################################
         # Later that night in a Template

         <table border="1">
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>First row</td>
           </tr>
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>Second row</td>
           </tr>
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>Third row</td>
           </tr>
         </table>

         [% class.reset %]
         <table border="1">
           <tr class="[% class %]">
             <td>Another first row</td>
           </tr>
         </table>

         #######################################################
         # Which of course produces

         <table border="1">
           <tr class="normalrow">
             <td>First row</td>
           </tr>
           <tr class="alternaterow">
             <td>Second row</td>
           </tr>
           <tr class="normalrow">
             <td>Third row</td>
           </tr>
         </table>

         <table border="1">
           <tr class="normalrow">
             <td>Another first row</td>
           </tr>
         </table>

DESCRIPTION

       Sometimes, apparently almost exclusively when doing alternating table row backgrounds, you
       need to print an alternating, cycling, set of values into a template.

       Template::Plugin::Cycle is a small, simple, and hopefully DWIM solution to these sorts of
       tasks.

       It can be used either as a normal Template::Plugin, or can be created directly and passed
       in as a template argument, so that you can set up situations where it is implicitly
       available in every page.

METHODS

   new [ $Context ] [, @list ]
       The "new" constructor creates and returns a new "Template::Plugin::Cycle" object. It can
       be optionally passed an initial set of values to cycle through.

       When called from within a Template, the new constructor will be passed the current
       Template::Context as the first argument. This will be ignored.

       By doing this, you can use it both directly, AND from inside a Template.

   init @list
       If you need to set the values for a new empty object, of change the values to cycle
       through for an existing object, they can be passed to the "init" method.

       The method always returns the '' null string, to avoid inserting anything into the
       template.

   elements
       The "elements" method returns the number of items currently set for the
       "Template::Plugin::Cycle" object.

   list
       The "list" method returns the current list of values for the "Template::Plugin::Cycle"
       object.

       This is also the prefered method for getting access to a value at a particular position
       within the list of items being cycled to.

         [%# Access a variety of things from the list %]
         The first item in the Cycle object is [% cycle.list.first %].
         The second item in the Cycle object is [% cycle.list.[1] %].
         The last item in the Cycle object is [% cycle.list.last %].

   next
       The "next" method returns the next value from the Cycle. If the end of the list of valuese
       is reached, it will "cycle" back the first object again.

       This method is also the one called when the object is stringified. That is, when it
       appears on its own in a template. Thus, you can do something like the following.

         <!-- An example of alternate row classes in a table-->
         <table border="1">
           <!-- Explicitly access the next class in the cycle -->
           <tr class="[% rowclass.next %]">
             <td>First row</td>
           </tr>
           <!-- This has the same effect -->
           <tr class="[% rowclass %]">
             <td>Second row</td>
           </tr>
         </table>

   value
       The "value" method is an analogy for the "next" method.

   reset
       If a single "Template::Plugin::Cycle" object is to be used it multiple places within a
       template, and it is important that the same value be first every time, then the "reset"
       method can be used.

       The "reset" method resets the Cycle, so that the next value returned will be the first
       value in the Cycle object.

SUPPORT

       Bugs should be submitted via the CPAN bug tracker, located at

       http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Template-Plugin-Cycle
       <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Template-Plugin-Cycle>

       For other issues, or commercial enhancement or support, contact the author..

AUTHOR

       Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>

       Thank you to Phase N Australia (http://phase-n.com/ <http://phase-n.com/>) for permitting
       the open sourcing and release of this distribution as a spin-off from a commercial
       project.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2004 - 2008 Adam Kennedy.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.

       The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.