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Theme-related Software Concept and Design

Table of contents

    Overview

    Tiki uses the Smarty template engine, so pages generally have a PHP file (.php) and a Smarty template (.tpl) associated with them. These produce the XHTML for the page, which is then given visual styles with CSS. The CSS is provided by a combination of some feature-specific stylesheets, default layout and design stylesheets, and theme stylesheets.

    Concept (Tiki14)

    There are several features that determine which theme is displayed for a given screen. See also http://doc.tiki.org/Themes
    About the changes for Tiki14 see a bit more info here: https://dev.tiki.org/Tiki14#New_theme_for_tiki.org_sites.

    Site theme

    Site theme setting can be made at the Look and Feel settings panel. Themes can have options.

    Overrides:
    - none

    Overridden by:
    - user theme
    - group theme
    - theme control
    - perspective

    User theme

    If preference change_theme is enabled than users are allowed to change theme.

    Overrides:
    - site theme
    - perspective

    Overridden by:
    - group theme
    - admin theme
    - theme control

    Limited by:
    - available themes

     Available themes

    In the Look&Feel settings page it is possible to limit the list of the themes and theme options users can pick from when changing theme is allowed (preference name: available_themes).

    Group theme

    Define a theme for a group (tiki-admingroups.php)

    Overrides:
    - site theme
    - user theme
    - perspective

    Overridden by:
    - admin theme
    - theme control

    Admin theme

    Themes and theme options for the settings control panels (tiki-admin.php?page=XXX).

    Overrides:
    - site theme
    - user theme
    - group theme

    Overridden by:
    - perspective setting

    Not affected by:
    - theme control

    Theme Control

    Allows to have a specific theme for objects, categories and sections, see Documentation.

    Overrides:
    - site theme
    - user theme
    - group theme
    - perspective

    Overridden by:
    - none

    No effect for:
    - admin theme

    Perspective

    Perspectives are to override a preference, see Documentation

    Overrides:
    - site theme
    - admin theme

    Overridden by:
    - user theme

    Edit CSS

    It is possible to try, view and edit css files from a built in CSS editor. Using the "Try" functionality the selected theme/option is applied
    and shown for all screens in Tiki for the duration of your login session.
    Overrides:
    - everything

    Overridden by:
    - none

    How Tiki decides which theme to display


    0) If a CSS try theme session is active than that theme will be used, so in this case none of the below points apply

    1) Check for user's theme preference

    2) If there is a group theme defined, override user's theme

    3) If Theme Control feature is enabled, then override the above like this:
    - If a theme is assigned to the individual object that theme is used
    - If not then if a theme is assigned to the object's category that theme is used: but if the object is assigned to multiple categories and this causes a conflict in the theme choice then they are all skipped and the next logical choice in this hierarchy is chosen
    - If not then a theme for the section is used

    4) If an admin page (Settings control panel) is displayed, check if there is any admin theme set to override. When in a perspective, check if there is a perspective specific setting and override if available.

    5) If none of the above applies, use the site theme. When in a perspective, see if there is a perspective specific setting and override if available.

    Theme related CSS files

    Basics

    1) Tiki always loads themes/base_files/css/tiki_base.css, no matter which theme is selected. This file contains rules specific to Tiki that Bootstrap doesn't have awareness of.

    2) The css file of a theme (or theme option) must always have to be named like the name of the theme's or option's folder name, for example for fivealive-lite theme it is called fivealive-lite.css. This isn't necessary if the theme is selected by specifying the Custom theme URL, but if it's selected as a theme in the "themes" directory, then it needs to follow that naming scheme.

    Create a new theme or theme option

     Tip

    More information about how to structure a new theme: How To Add a New Theme

    New theme

    If you want to create a new theme for Tiki, you have place a css file under the css folder in the theme's directory (eg: for a new theme called "mytheme": themes/mytheme/css/mytheme.css).

     Please note

    The themes/base_files/tiki_base.css has rules for Tiki-specific things (similar to the old layout.css and design.css). It doesn't have anything related to Bootstrap, though, such as the grid, form classes, and so on. These have to be provided by the theme stylesheet.
    It isn't necessary to use Less to make the theme stylesheet, as long as the end product is essentially a bootstrap.css equivalent. That is, the theme stylesheet needs to contain the grid layout classes, rules for responsive behavior, and so on in addition to the color and typography rules, etc. for the theme.
    Anyway, this is what we might think of as the "standard" way, with the fewest separate CSS files.
    More information about how to structure a new theme: How To Add a New Theme

    New theme option

    If you want to create a simple new option called "myoption" (eg: for the "mytheme" theme), than proceed like this:

    • step1) create a new subfolder under the "themes/mytheme/options" folder called "myoption/css" (so path is: "themes/mytheme/options/myoption/css/")
    • step2) place in the new folder a css file that contains the changed or additional css for your new option (eg: "themes/mytheme/options/myoption/css/myoption.css") - this is loaded in addition to the theme.css file in the main css folder eg themes/mytheme/css/mytheme.css
    • step3) optionally place in the new folder a custom.css file that contains your specific local customizations for that one Tiki instance (eg: "themes/mytheme/options/myoption/css/custom.css") - this too is loaded in addition to any custom.css file that is placed in the main css folder eg themes/mytheme/css/custom.css


    For more complex options you can also have the same folder structure as for a normal theme (fonts, icons, images, templates, etc).

     Tip

    If you just want a few simple changes to the default Bootstrap theme, than create a new option under "themes/default/options/"
    This way the new theme doesn't have to have the bootstrap rules. The new theme can just override or add to the bootstrap rules, essentially being a Bootstrap theme option.

    Customizaton of themes and options

    If you want to slightly modify (change some colors, backgrounds, etc) a theme or a theme option shipped with Tiki then it may be easier for you, if you don't edit the theme files directly, but create a custom.css file in the same directory of the theme or theme option and store your customizations there.

    If you have a main theme with theme options, you can have a custom.css for the main theme and another custom.css for the theme option, both will be loaded (first the main theme's custom.css, then the theme option's custom.css)

    To create a highly customized theme however it may be better, from an onward change management point of view, to add your own option to an existing theme. This then lets you use all the css from the main theme as a 'base' for your customised theme and this will be automatically maintained/updated for subsequent Tiki version changes. All you have to do then is to develop your option css and change this from time to time as may be necessary due to Tiki version upgrades and you can use your own naming convention for the option and its subsequent versions for your change management process.

    Loading css files

    • For a main theme Tiki gets first the theme's main css file (eg: from themes/mytheme/css/mytheme.css), then a custom.css file containing local customizations if found in the theme's css folder (eg: /themes/mytheme/css/custom.css)
    • If a theme option is enabled, then Tiki gets first the main theme's css file (eg: from "themes/mytheme/css/mytheme.css") then it gets the theme option's css file ("themes/mytheme/options/myoption/css/myoption.css"), and then it loads the main theme's custom.css (eg: from "themes/mytheme/css/custom.css") and finally the theme option's custom.css file containing local customizations if found in the option's folder (eg: "themes/mytheme/options/myoption/css/custom.css")

    Theme related smarty template files

    Basics

    • Tiki uses smarty templates
    • Tiki ships all basic template files in the "templates/" folder.
     Tip for Tiki14 upgraders

    The goal of moving customization stuff to the "themes/" folder was to have self-contained themes, which means that you can store all your site customizations (css, templates, images, etc) in this folder. This move should make your life easier. However, you should be aware, that if you are upgrading from a preTiki14 version then you have to move your custom templates from the legacy "templates/styles/mytheme/" folder to the new "themes/mytheme/templates" folder or the themes/mytheme/options/myoption/templates.
    (please note that "mytheme" and "myoption" are not actual folder names, they are just examples)

    Customization of templates

    If you don't like how, for example, a blog post (templates/tiki-view_blog_post.tpl) looks, you can have your own, redesigned template.
    You have a number of ways of implementing this however as follows:
    1) If you want to have a custom template available for all your themes, you should put the altered or new template file in the "themes/templates/" folder.
    2) If you want to have a custom template for a given theme and all its potential options, put the template file in the "themes/mytheme/templates" folder
    3) If you want to have a custom template for just one specific theme option, put the template file in the "themes/mytheme/options/myoption/templates" folder

    In this way you can manage a hierarchy of choices so that the same .tpl file can have different content depending upon whether it is available at a specific level in this choice hierarchy.

    How Tiki decides which template to display

    1) first try to use the theme option's template folder (eg: "themes/mytheme/options/myoption/templates/tiki-view_blog_post.tpl)
    2) then try to use the theme's template folder (eg: "themes/mytheme/templates/tiki-view_blog_post.tpl)
    3) then try to use "themes/templates" folder (eg: "themes/templates/tiki-view_blog_post.tpl)
    4) finally use "templates/" folder ( (eg: "templates/tiki-view_blog_post.tpl))

    Some other considerations

    Newsletter css


    As discussed in the Newsletter documentation a customised newsletter.css file can be defined to ensure that the css used in the Newsletter generated emails is as compact as possible and to ensure better presentation in a range of email clients.

    The customised newsletter.css file should be placed in either the /themes/mytheme/css/ folder or the /themes/mytheme/options/myoption/css/ folder.

    custom.js


    Custom javascript can be defined using the Customization tab of the main Look & Feel admin screen - but often this is better managed in a separate file called custom.js that is held on the server.

    There are number of choices where the file with the custom javascript can be held on the server depending upon whether the script is theme dependent or not:

    • to use a file independent of any specific theme it should be placed in the root of the /themes folder
    • to use a file for all options of a specific theme it should be placed in the root of the main folder for the theme eg in /themes/mytheme
    • finally to use a file for a specific option within a theme it should be placed in the root of the option folder eg in themes/mytheme/options/myoption/


    In all instances the file will be automatically loaded after the main set of javascript definitions.

    Developer info

    The different theme settings are stored as preferences and can be accessed as smarty variables.

    Theme selection logic

    Theme selection is primarily done at lib/setup/theme.php. If you enable Theme Control, then after lib/setup/theme.php has finished tiki-tc.php kicks in and makes sure that Theme Control settings are applied.

    Template selection logic

    Template selection is done using lib/init/smarty.php.

    Most of this was developed in the tiki14_themes experimental branch

    It was merged back into trunk on 19 jan 2015

    [+] Here are the details of the merge back to trunk commit

    Upgrade to Tiki14

    The structure of themes changed singificantly for Tiki14, so please note the below points:
    - your old css files will probably need to be reviewed modified as many selectors have been adjusted to bootstrap
    - an upgrade patch is provided that modifies your database. The change is focusing on removing ".css" from the end of the theme values in as shown below:

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    UPDATE `tiki_preferences` SET `name` = 'theme' WHERE `name` = 'theme_active'; UPDATE `tiki_preferences` SET `name` = 'theme_option', `value` = REPLACE(`value`, '.css', '') WHERE `name` = 'style_option'; UPDATE `tiki_user_preferences` SET `value` = REPLACE(`value`, '.css', '') WHERE `prefName` = 'theme'; UPDATE `tiki_user_preferences` SET `prefName` = 'theme_option', `value` = REPLACE(`value`, '.css', '') WHERE `prefName` = 'theme-option'; UPDATE `tiki_theme_control_categs` SET `theme` = REPLACE(`theme`, '.css', ''); UPDATE `tiki_theme_control_objects` SET `theme` = REPLACE(`theme`, '.css', ''); UPDATE `tiki_theme_control_sections` SET `theme` = REPLACE(`theme`, '.css', ''); UPDATE `users_groups` SET `groupTheme` = REPLACE(`groupTheme`, '.css', '');

    Page last modified on Wednesday 08 of July, 2015 06:42:07 GMT-0000