winter/wn-blocks-plugin

Block based content management plugin for Winter CMS.

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Type:winter-plugin

dev-main 2024-10-28 18:35 UTC

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Last update: 2024-11-28 18:51:18 UTC


README

Blocks Plugin

MIT License

Provides a "block based" content management experience in Winter CMS

NOTE: This plugin is still in development and is likely to undergo changes. Do not use in production environments without using a version constraint in your composer.json file and carefully monitoring for breaking changes.

Installation

This plugin is available for installation via Composer.

composer require winter/wn-blocks-plugin

After installing the plugin you will need to run the migrations and (if you are using a public folder) republish your public directory.

php artisan migrate

NOTE: In order to have the actions support function correctly, you need to load /plugins/winter/blocks/assets/dist/js/blocks.js after the Snowboard framework has been loaded.

Core Concepts

Blocks

This plugin manages the concept of "blocks" in Winter CMS. Blocks are self contained pieces of structured content that can be managed and rendered in a variety of ways.

Blocks can be provided by both plugins and themes and can be overridden by themes.

Actions

This plugin also introduces the concepts of "actions"; a way to define and execute client side actions that can be triggered by various events. Currently, actions are only defined in the $/winter/blocks/meta/actions.yaml file and must exist as a function on the window.actions object in the frontend keyed by the action's identifier that receives the data object as the first argument and (optionally) the event object that triggered the action as the second argument.

NOTE: This is very much a WIP API and is subject to change. Feedback very much welcome here for ideas around how to register, manage, extend, and provide actions to the frontend.

Tags

Blocks may have one or more tags, which is a way of defining and grouping blocks. For example, you may have a Gallery block which allows only "image" tagged blocks to be used, or a container block which allows all "content" tagged blocks but does not allow another "container" tagged block within.

Tags are defined in the blocks, and can be used to filter the available blocks in the Blocks form widget.

Registering Blocks

Themes can have their blocks automatically registered by placing .block files in the /blocks folder and subfolders.

Plugins can register blocks by providing a registerBlocks() method in their Plugin.php file. The method should return an array of block definitions in the following format:

public function registerBlocks(): array
{
    return [
        'example' => '$/myauthor/myplugin/blocks/example.block',
    ];
}

Block Definition

Blocks are defined as .block files that consist of 2 to 3 parts:

  • A YAML configuration section that defines the block's name, description, and other metadata as well as the block's properties and the form used to edit those properties.
  • A PHP code section that allows for basic code to be executed when the block is rendered, similar to a partial.
  • A Twig template section that defines the HTML markup template of the block.

When there are two parts, they are the Settings (YAML) & Markup (Twig) sections.

The following property values (name, description, etc) can be defined in the Settings (YAML) section of the .block files:

name: Example
description: Example Block Description
icon: icon-name
tags: [] # Defines the tags that this block is associated with
permissions: [] # List of permissions required to interact with the block
fields: # The form fields used to populate the block's content
config: # The block configuration options

Blocks can use components in them, although they may face lifecycle limitations with complex AJAX handlers similar to component support in partials.

Fields and Configuration

Blocks may define both fields as well as a config property in the Settings. Both of these parameters accept a form schema, but serve different purposes. In general, fields should contain the fields that actually fill in the content of the block, whereas the config should contain the fields that define the appearance or structure of the block itself. Fields are displayed within the block in the blocks form widget and configuration is displayed in an Inspector which can be shown by clicking on the "cogwheel" icon of a block in the blocks form widget.

For example, let's say you have a Title block which can display a heading tag in your content. You may optionally want to align it to left, center or right, and define which heading tag to use. The best practice would be to have a content field in the fields definition, because it's the actual content being displayed. The alignment and tag would become part of the config configuration.

Example:

name: Title
description: Adds a title
icon: icon-heading
tags: ["content"]
fields:
    content:
        label: false
        span: full
        type: text
config:
    size:
        label: Size
        span: auto
        type: dropdown
        default: h2
        options:
            h1: H1
            h2: H2
            h3: H3
            h4: H4
            h5: H5
    alignment_x:
        label: Alignment
        span: auto
        type: dropdown
        default: center
        options:
            left: Left
            center: Centre
            right: Right
==
{% if config.alignment_x == 'left' %}
    {% set alignment = 'text-left' %}
{% elseif config.alignment_x == 'center' or not config.alignment_x %}
    {% set alignment = 'text-center' %}
{% elseif config.alignment_x == 'right' %}
    {% set alignment = 'text-right' %}
{% endif %}

<{{ config.size }} class="{{ alignment }}">
    {{ content }}
</{{ config.size }}>

Using the blocks FormWidget

In order to provide an interface for managing block-based content, this plugin provides the blocks FormWidget. This widget can be used in the backend as a form field to manage blocks.

The blocks FormWidget supports the following additional properties:

  • allow: An array of block types that are allowed to be added to the widget. If specified, only those block types listed will be available to add to the current instance of the field. You can define either a straight array of individual blocks to allow, or define an object with tags and/or blocks to allow whole tags or individual blocks.
  • ignore: A list of block types that are not allowed to be added to the widget. If not specified, all block types will be available to add to the current instance of the field. You can define either a straight array of individual blocks to ignore, or define an object with tags and/or blocks to ignore whole tags or individual blocks.
  • tags: A list of block tags that are allowed to be added to the widget. If specified, only block types that have at least one of the listed tags will be available to add to the current instance of the field.

Those properties allow you to limit the block types that can be added to a specific instance of the widget, which can be very helpful when building "container" type blocks that need to avoid including themselves or only support a specific set of blocks as "children".

Examples

The button_group block type only allows a button block to be added to it:

buttons:
    label: Buttons
    span: full
    type: blocks
    allow:
        - button

The container block type allows any block called title, or has a tag of content, to be added to it:

container:
    label: Container
    span: full
    type: blocks
    allow:
        blocks:
            - title
        tags:
            - content

The columns_two block type allows every block except for itself to be added to it:

left:
    label: Left Column
    span: left
    type: blocks
    ignore:
        - columns_two
right:
    label: Right Column
    span: right
    type: blocks
    ignore:
        - columns_two

Integration with the Winter.Pages plugin:

Include the following line in your layout file to include the blocks FormWidget on a Winter.Pages page:

{variable type="blocks" name="blocks" tags="pages" tab="winter.pages::lang.editor.content"}{/variable}

Rendering Blocks

Using Twig

Twig functions are provided by this plugin for rendering blocks. You can then use the following Twig snippet to render the blocks data in your layout:

{{ renderBlocks(blocks) }}

You can use it anywhere an expression is accepted:

{{ ('<p>Some text</p>' ~ renderBlocks(blocks) ~ '<p>Some more text<p/>') | raw }}

{% set myContent = renderBlocks(blocks) %}

If you need to render a single block, you can use the renderBlock function:

{{ renderBlock({
    '_group':'title',
    'content':'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.',
    'alignment_x':'left',
    'size':'h1',
}) }}

{{ renderBlock('title', {
    'content':'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.',
    'alignment_x':'left',
    'size':'h1',
}) }}

Using a partial

If you need to customize the rendering of blocks according to their group, you can use a special blocks.htm partial in your theme:

{% for blockIndex, block in blocks %}
    {# Adding blocks to the following array allows them to implement their own containers #}
    {% if block._group in ["hero", "section"] %}
        {{ renderBlock(block) }}
    {% else %}
        <section class="flex flex-wrap items-center mx-auto max-w-screen-xl">
            <div class="w-full p-4">
                {{ renderBlock(block) }}
            </div>
        </section>
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

You can then use the following Twig snippet to render the block data in your layout:

{% partial 'blocks' blocks=blocks %}

Using PHP

use Winter\Blocks\Classes\Block;

// Render a single block from stored data
Block::render($model->blocks[0]);

// Render an array of blocks from stored data
Block::renderAll($model->blocks);

// Render a single block manually
Block::render('title', [
    'content' => 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.',
    'alignment_x' => 'left',
    'size' => 'h1',
]);

// Render a single block manually using only array data
Block::render([
    '_group' => 'title',
    'content' => 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.',
    'alignment_x' => 'left',
    'size' => 'h1',
]);

Integrating with TailwindCSS / CSS Purging

If your theme uses CSS class purging (i.e. Tailwind), it can be useful to add the following paths to your build configuration to include the styles for any blocks defined by the theme or plugins.

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
    content: [
        // Winter.Pages static page content
        './content/**/*.htm',
        './layouts/**/*.htm',
        './pages/**/*.htm',
        './partials/**/*.htm',
        './blocks/**/*.block',

        // Blocks provided by plugins
        '../../plugins/*/*/blocks/*.block',
    ],
};

Feedback

The Winter.Blocks is perfect for my block-based themes. I've been looking for something like this for a long time