Creating a Twig Extension ========================= The main motivation for writing an extension is to move often used code into a reusable class like adding support for internationalization. An extension can define tags, filters, tests, operators, global variables, functions, and node visitors. Creating an extension also makes for a better separation of code that is executed at compilation time and code needed at runtime. As such, it makes your code faster. Most of the time, it is useful to create a single extension for your project, to host all the specific tags and filters you want to add to Twig. .. note:: Before writing your own extensions, have a look at the Twig official extension repository: http://github.com/fabpot/Twig-extensions. An extension is a class that implements the following interface:: interface Twig_ExtensionInterface { /** * Initializes the runtime environment. * * This is where you can load some file that contains filter functions for instance. * * @param Twig_Environment $environment The current Twig_Environment instance */ function initRuntime(Twig_Environment $environment); /** * Returns the token parser instances to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of Twig_TokenParserInterface or Twig_TokenParserBrokerInterface instances */ function getTokenParsers(); /** * Returns the node visitor instances to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of Twig_NodeVisitorInterface instances */ function getNodeVisitors(); /** * Returns a list of filters to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of filters */ function getFilters(); /** * Returns a list of tests to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of tests */ function getTests(); /** * Returns a list of functions to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of functions */ function getFunctions(); /** * Returns a list of operators to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of operators */ function getOperators(); /** * Returns a list of global variables to add to the existing list. * * @return array An array of global variables */ function getGlobals(); /** * Returns the name of the extension. * * @return string The extension name */ function getName(); } To keep your extension class clean and lean, it can inherit from the built-in ``Twig_Extension`` class instead of implementing the whole interface. That way, you just need to implement the ``getName()`` method as the ``Twig_Extension`` provides empty implementations for all other methods. The ``getName()`` method must return a unique identifier for your extension. Now, with this information in mind, let's create the most basic extension possible:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getName() { return 'project'; } } .. note:: Of course, this extension does nothing for now. We will customize it in the next sections. Twig does not care where you save your extension on the filesystem, as all extensions must be registered explicitly to be available in your templates. You can register an extension by using the ``addExtension()`` method on your main ``Environment`` object:: $twig = new Twig_Environment($loader); $twig->addExtension(new Project_Twig_Extension()); Of course, you need to first load the extension file by either using ``require_once()`` or by using an autoloader (see `spl_autoload_register()`_). .. tip:: The bundled extensions are great examples of how extensions work. Globals ------- Global variables can be registered in an extension via the ``getGlobals()`` method:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getGlobals() { return array( 'text' => new Text(), ); } // ... } Functions --------- Functions can be registered in an extension via the ``getFunctions()`` method:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getFunctions() { return array( 'lipsum' => new Twig_Function_Function('generate_lipsum'), ); } // ... } Filters ------- To add a filter to an extension, you need to override the ``getFilters()`` method. This method must return an array of filters to add to the Twig environment:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getFilters() { return array( 'rot13' => new Twig_Filter_Function('str_rot13'), ); } // ... } As you can see in the above code, the ``getFilters()`` method returns an array where keys are the name of the filters (``rot13``) and the values the definition of the filter (``new Twig_Filter_Function('str_rot13')``). As seen in the previous chapter, you can also define filters as static methods on the extension class:: $twig->addFilter('rot13', new Twig_Filter_Function('Project_Twig_Extension::rot13Filter')); You can also use ``Twig_Filter_Method`` instead of ``Twig_Filter_Function`` when defining a filter to use a method:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getFilters() { return array( 'rot13' => new Twig_Filter_Method($this, 'rot13Filter'), ); } public function rot13Filter($string) { return str_rot13($string); } // ... } The first argument of the ``Twig_Filter_Method`` constructor is always ``$this``, the current extension object. The second one is the name of the method to call. Using methods for filters is a great way to package your filter without polluting the global namespace. This also gives the developer more flexibility at the cost of a small overhead. Overriding default Filters ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If some default core filters do not suit your needs, you can easily override them by creating your own core extension. Of course, you don't need to copy and paste the whole core extension code of Twig. Instead, you can just extends it and override the filter(s) you want by overriding the ``getFilters()`` method:: class MyCoreExtension extends Twig_Extension_Core { public function getFilters() { return array_merge(parent::getFilters(), array( 'date' => new Twig_Filter_Method($this, 'dateFilter'), // ... )); } public function dateFilter($timestamp, $format = 'F j, Y H:i') { return '...'.twig_date_format_filter($timestamp, $format); } // ... } Here, we override the ``date`` filter with a custom one. Using this new core extension is as simple as registering the ``MyCoreExtension`` extension by calling the ``addExtension()`` method on the environment instance:: $twig = new Twig_Environment($loader); $twig->addExtension(new MyCoreExtension()); But I can already hear some people wondering how it can work as the Core extension is loaded by default. That's true, but the trick is that both extensions share the same unique identifier (``core`` - defined in the ``getName()`` method). By registering an extension with the same name as an existing one, you have actually overridden the default one, even if it is already registered:: $twig->addExtension(new Twig_Extension_Core()); $twig->addExtension(new MyCoreExtension()); Tags ---- Adding a tag in an extension can be done by overriding the ``getTokenParsers()`` method. This method must return an array of tags to add to the Twig environment:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getTokenParsers() { return array(new Project_Set_TokenParser()); } // ... } In the above code, we have added a single new tag, defined by the ``Project_Set_TokenParser`` class. The ``Project_Set_TokenParser`` class is responsible for parsing the tag and compiling it to PHP. Operators --------- The ``getOperators()`` methods allows to add new operators. Here is how to add ``!``, ``||``, and ``&&`` operators:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getOperators() { return array( array( '!' => array('precedence' => 50, 'class' => 'Twig_Node_Expression_Unary_Not'), ), array( '||' => array('precedence' => 10, 'class' => 'Twig_Node_Expression_Binary_Or', 'associativity' => Twig_ExpressionParser::OPERATOR_LEFT), '&&' => array('precedence' => 15, 'class' => 'Twig_Node_Expression_Binary_And', 'associativity' => Twig_ExpressionParser::OPERATOR_LEFT), ), ); } // ... } Tests ----- The ``getTests()`` methods allows to add new test functions:: class Project_Twig_Extension extends Twig_Extension { public function getTests() { return array( 'even' => new Twig_Test_Function('twig_test_even'), ); } // ... } .. _`spl_autoload_register()`: http://www.php.net/spl_autoload_register