Skip to main content
Version: master

Output API

The Output API is responsible for visual aspects of Moodle content. This page explains how renderers, renderables, themes and templates all work together.

Page Output Journey

Let's start with building a page that is part of an admin tool.

/admin/tool/demo/index.php
<?php
// Standard GPL and phpdocs
require_once(__DIR__ . '/../../../config.php');
require_once($CFG->libdir.'/adminlib.php');

admin_externalpage_setup('tooldemo');

// Set up the page.
$title = get_string('pluginname', 'tool_demo');
$pagetitle = $title;
$url = new moodle_url("/admin/tool/demo/index.php");
$PAGE->set_url($url);
$PAGE->set_title($title);
$PAGE->set_heading($title);

$output = $PAGE->get_renderer('tool_demo');

echo $output->header();
echo $output->heading($pagetitle);

$renderable = new \tool_demo\output\index_page('Some text');
echo $output->render($renderable);

echo $output->footer();
Setup of an admin page

On admin pages, the admin_externalpage_setup($sectionname); function should be called to set up and perform permission checks, for example:

admin/tool/demo/mypage.php
require_once(__DIR__ . '/../../config.php');
require_once("{$CFG->libdir}/adminlib.php");
admin_externalpage_setup('example');

Firstly, we set some general $PAGE properties. We load the title of the page from a language string (see String API).

// Set up the page.
$title = get_string('pluginname', 'tool_demo');
$pagetitle = $title;
$url = new moodle_url("/admin/tool/demo/index.php");
$PAGE->set_url($url);
$PAGE->set_title($title);
$PAGE->set_heading($title);
What is $PAGE and where did it come from ?

$PAGE is a global variable used to track the state of the page that is being returned. It is an instance of the moodle_page class defined in lib/pagelib.php. See Page API for more information on the $PAGE variable.

The most important properties stored in $PAGE are the page context, URL, layout, title and headings. $PAGE also gives access to some other important classes such as $PAGE->requires, which is an instance of the page_requirements_manager (lib/outputrequirementslib.php). The page_requirements_manager class lets us set dependencies on e.g. JavaScript and CSS to be inserted in the correct place in the page (The order in which things are inserted into the page is hugely important for performance).

$PAGE also lets us load specific renderers for a plugin, or plugin and subtype. We will cover renderers in more detail next.

$output = $PAGE->get_renderer('tool_demo');

This gets an instance of the plugin_renderer_base class that we use to create all output for our page. Themers can subclass this renderer to override specific render methods in order to customise Moodle's output. See Output renderers for more information, and Overriding a renderer for information about how themers can customise a renderer.

info

Some pages use the global variable $OUTPUT to generate their output. This is a generic renderer used for core pages etc, but plugins should always use a more specific plugin renderer.

echo $output->header();
echo $output->heading($pagetitle);

This code prints the header of the page and adds one heading to the page at the top of the content region. Page headings are very important in Moodle and should be applied consistently. See HTML Guidelines for more information on how and where to use headings.

$renderable = new \tool_demo\output\index_page('Some text');
echo $output->render($renderable);

This is the most interesting part of our page. We are creating an instance of a renderable and telling our renderer to render it. The renderable is usually more complex than this. It should hold all the data required for the renderer to display the page. This means we should perform all our logic such as database queries, page parameters and access checks in advance then pass the results as data to the renderable. The renderable then just takes that data and returns an HTML representation of it.

echo $output->footer();

This prints the HTML for the bottom of the page. It is very important because it also prints out things that were added to the page_requirements_manager and that need to be printed in the footer; things like JavaScript includes, navigation tree setup, closing open containers tags etc. The reason all JavaScripts are added to the footer of the page is for performance. If you add JavaScript includes to the top of the page, or inline with the content, the browser must stop and execute the JavaScript before it can render the page. See https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/insights/BlockingJS for more information.

Renderable

In the code above, we created a renderable. This is a class that you have to add to your plugin. It holds all the data required to display something on the page. Here is the renderable for this example:

/admin/tool/demo/classes/output/index_page.php
<?php
// Standard GPL and phpdocs

namespace tool_demo\output;

use renderable
use renderer_base
use templatable
use stdClass;

class index_page implements renderable, templatable {
/** @var string $sometext Some text to show how to pass data to a template. */
private $sometext = null;

public function __construct($sometext): void {
$this->sometext = $sometext;
}

/**
* Export this data so it can be used as the context for a mustache template.
*
* @return stdClass
*/
public function export_for_template(renderer_base $output): stdClass {
$data = new stdClass();
$data->sometext = $this->sometext;
return $data;
}
}

This class implements the renderable interface, which has no methods, and the templatable interface, which means that this class could be rendered with a template, so it must implement the export_for_template method. So in this example, the class accepts data via it's constructor, and stores that data in class variables. It does nothing else fancy with the data in this example (but it could). Note that the export_for_template function should only return simple types (arrays, stdClass, bool, int, float, string).

Now let's look at the renderer for this plugin.

admin/tool/demo/classes/output/renderer.php
<?php
// Standard GPL and phpdocs

namespace tool_demo\output;

use plugin_renderer_base;

class renderer extends plugin_renderer_base {
/**
* Defer to template.
*
* @param index_page $page
*
* @return string html for the page
*/
public function render_index_page($page): string {
$data = $page->export_for_template($this);
return parent::render_from_template('tool_demo/index_page', $data);
}
}

The renderer exists to provide render_<page> methods for all renderables used in the plugin. A theme designer can provide a custom version of this renderer that changes the behaviour of any of the render methods and so to customize their theme. In this example, the render method for the index page (render_index_page) does 2 things. It asks the renderable to export it's data so that it is suitable for passing as the context to a template, and then renders a specific template with this context. A theme designer could either manipulate the data in the render method (e.g. removing menu entries), or change the template (change the generated HTML) to customize the output.

The template used in this plugin is located in the plugin's templates folder. The template can also be overridden by a theme designer.

admin/tool/demo/templates/index_page.mustache
<div class="hero-unit">
<h1>Heading</h1>
<p>{{sometext}}</p>
</div>

This is the mustache template for this demo. It uses some bootstrap classes directly to position and style the content on the page. {{sometext}} is replaced with the variable from the context when this template is rendered. For more information on templates see Templates.

Output Functions

This section tries to explain a bit how dynamic data should be sent from Moodle to the browser in an organised and standard way.

info

Obviously it's possible to have your own output methods but, thinking that you are going to share your code (yep, this is an OpenSource project!) and in the collaborative way we try to build and maintain the system every day, it would be really better to follow the basic guidelines explained below.

By using them you will be helping to have better, more secure and readable code. Spend some minutes trying to understand them, please!

Of course, these functions can be discussed, modified and new functions can arrive if there are some good reasons for it. Just discuss it in the General developer forum.

For each of the functions below we'll try to explain when they should be used, explaining the most important parameters supported and their meaning. Let's review them!

String formatting functions

p() and s()

function s($var, $strip=false)
function p($var, $strip=false)

These functions share the same code, so they will be explained together. The only difference is that s() returns the string, while p() prints it directly.

These functions should be used to:

  • print all the values of form fields like <input> or <textarea> tags.
  • show plain (non-HTML) text that has been introduced by the user (search string, quiz responses, ...).
  • print, in general, all the dynamic data, not being HTML, that doesn't need to be cleaned nor processed by filters. It is important not to use these functions for strings that contain HTML markup.

The functions replace certain characters that would have special meaning in HTML (<, >, ", ', and &) by HTML entities, so that they are displayed as intended. Note that even though the value of form fields printed with p() will have these characters converted to HTML entities, the submitted values will still contain the original characters.

The key parameter for this function is:

  • strip: it decides if we want to strip slashes from the string or not. By default, it's false, so no strip will be performed. We should set such parameter to 'true' only when data to be processed isn't coming from database, but from HTTP requests (forms, links, ...).

format_text()

function format_text($text, $format = FORMAT_MOODLE, $options = null, $courseid_do_not_use = null)

This function should be used to:

  • print any html/plain/markdown/moodle text, needing any of the features below. It is mainly used for long strings like posts, answers, glossary items, etc.
  • filter content through Moodle or 3rd party language filters for multi-language support. Not to be confused with get_string which is used to access localized strings in Moodle and its language packs. Together, these functions enable Moodle multi-language support . Note that this function is really heavy because it supports cleaning of dangerous contents, delegates processing to enabled content filters, supports different formats of text (HTML, PLAIN, MARKDOWN, MOODLE) and performs a lot of automatic conversions like adding smilies, build links. Also, it includes a strong cache mechanism (DB based) that will alleviate the server from a lot of work processing the same texts time and again.

Some interesting parameters for this function are:

  • format: To tell the function about how the data has been entered. It defaults to FORMAT_MOODLE that is a cool format to process plain text because it features automatic link conversion, smilies and good conversion to html output. Other formats are FORMAT_HTML, FORMAT_PLAIN, FORMAT_MARKDOWN.
  • options: Here we can specify how we want the process to be performed. You only need to define them if they are different from the default value assumed. Main options are:
    • options->noclean: To decide if we want to skip the clean-up of text, un-protecting us from attacks and other security flaws (defaults to false, so protection is enabled. You shouldn't set it to true ever unless you are 200% sure that only controlled users can edit it (mainly admins). Never use it for general text places (posts...) or you will be, sooner or later, attacked! Note that this option is ignored for FORMAT_PLAIN, the text is never cleaned.
    • options->trusted: Indicates that this content is trusted and does not need clean-up (but only if $CFG->enabletrusttext is true). This argument is ignored if noclean is specified.
    • options->filter: To decide if you want to allow filters to process the text (defaults to true). This is ignored by FORMAT_PLAIN for which filters are never applied.
    • options->context: If text is filtered (and this happens by default), it is very important to specify context (id or object) for applying filters. If context is not specified it will be taken from $PAGE->context and may potentially result in displaying the same text differently on different pages. For example all module-related information should have module context even when it appears in course-level reports, all course-related information such as name and description should have course context even when they are displayed on front page or system pages.
    • options->param: To decide if you want every paragraph automatically enclosed between html paragraph tags (<p>...</p>) (defaults to true). This option only applies to FORMAT_MOODLE.
    • options->newlines: To decide if line feeds in text should be converted to html newlines (<br />) (defaults to true). This option only applies to FORMAT_MOODLE.
    • options->nocache: If true the string will not be cached and will be formatted every call. Default false.
    • options->overflowdiv*: If set to true the formatted text will be encased in a div with the class no-overflow before being returned. Default false.
    • options->allowid : If true then id attributes will not be removed, even when using HTML Purifier. Default false.
    • options->blanktarget : If true all <a> tags will have target="_blank" added unless target is explicitly specified. Default false.
  • courseid_do_not_use: This parameter was earlier used to help applying filters but now is replaced with more precise $options->context, see above

format_string()

function format_string ($string, $striplinks = true, $options = null)

This function should be used to:

  • print short non-html strings that need filter processing (activity titles, post subjects, glossary concepts...). If the string contains HTML, it will be filtered out. If you want the HTML, use format_text() instead.
  • filter content through Moodle or 3rd party language filters for multi-language support. Not to be confused with get_string which is used to access localized strings in Moodle and its language packs. Together, these functions enable Moodle multi-language support . All enabled heading filters will be applied to the string.

Please note that this function is basically one stripped version of the full format_text() function detailed above and it doesn't offer any of its options or protections. It simply filters the strings and returns the result, so we must ensure that text being processed has been properly cleaned at input time, using the proper xxx_param() functions.

Some interesting parameters for this function are:

  • striplinks: To decide if, after the text has been processed by filters, we must delete any link from the result text. Used when we want to show the text inside menus, page titles... (defaults to true).
  • options
    • options->context: Context (id or object) for applying filters. If context is not specified it will be taken from $PAGE->context and may potentially result in displaying the same text differently on different pages. For example all module-related information should have module context even when it appears in course-level reports, all course-related information such as name and description should have course context even when they are displayed on front page or system pages.
    • options->escape: To decide if you want to escape HTML entities. True by default.
    • options->filter: To decide if you want to allow filters to process the text (defaults to true). This is ignored by FORMAT_PLAIN for which filters are never applied.
note

In earlier versions of Moodle, the third argument was integer $courseid. It is still supported for legacy - if the third argument is an integer instead of an array or object, it is considered to be course id and is this course's context is passed to the filters being applied.

Simple elements rendering

info

Those methods are designed to replace the old html_writer::tag(...) methods. Even if many of them are just wrappers around the old methods, they are more semantic and could be overridden by component renderers.

While to render complex elements, you should use templates, some simple elements can be rendered using the following functions:

container()

function container(string $contents, ?string $classes = null, ?string $id = null): string

This function should be used to:

  • Print a basic div container with the given contents, classes and id.

Some interesting parameters for this function are:

  • contents: The contents of the container.
  • classes: The classes of the container. Note that this parameter is a comma-separated list of classes, not an array.
  • id: An optional id of the container.

paragraph()

function paragraph(string $contents, ?string $classes = null, ?string $id = null): string

This function should be used to:

  • Print a basic p paragraph with the given contents, classes and id.

Some interesting parameters for this function are:

  • contents: The contents of the paragraph.
  • classes: The classes of the paragraph. Note that this parameter is a comma-separated list of classes, not an array.
  • id: An optional id of the paragraph.

sr_text()

function sr_text(string $contents): string

This function should be used to:

  • Print an inline text for screen readers only.

Some interesting parameters for this function are:

  • contents: The contents fo screen readers.

In the standard Boost theme this method will output a span using the Bootstrap screen reader class:

<span class="sr-only">Contents</span>

See also