Reputation: 73
I'm currently developing a web application using Symfony 2.1.0.
I've read through the Templating chapter of the book and I'm trying to include assets (right now, it's just a single stylesheet) in my web pages.
I'm using the Three-level inheritance system that is mentioned in the book, and my application structure currently looks like this:
As you can see, I have put the stylesheet in my bundle. I don't know whether this is good practice or not.
Now, the thing is, in layout.html I added this:
{% block stylesheets %}
{{ parent() }}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{{ asset('css/main.css)' }}" />
{% endblock %}
But asset('css/main.css')
is just linking to /css/main.css
, whereas ./app/console assets:install
installs the assets in web/bundles/mypagebundle/
. I don't like the fact that this way, my bundle name would be publicly visible (which could make users suspect I'm using Symfony, and I like keeping the internals of my webpage, well, internal). Is it possible to change the directory where assets:install
would install the assets? It seems tedious to me to manually install the assets in web/.
I'm also thinking about using Assetic for asset management, as I personally like the possibility to automatically minify my scripts/stylesheets and store them all together in one file. However, I hear that this is not possible if you include stylesheets at different levels, i.e. it wouldn't work with the three-level inheritance system. Is it possible to work around that? Also, would using Assetic enable me to hide my bundle name from the public?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 7977
Reputation: 99889
Using assetic would address all your issues.
I hear that this is not possible if you include stylesheets at different levels, i.e. it wouldn't work with the three-level inheritance system
You can, but it will generate a css file for each level (just like with asset(), actually).
Example:
layout:
{% block stylesheets %}
{{ parent() }}
{% stylesheets 'main.css' %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{{ asset_url }}" />
{% endstylesheets %}
{% endblock %}
sub-template:
{% block stylesheets %}
{{ parent() }}
{% stylesheets 'sub.css' %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{{ asset_url }}" />
{% endstylesheets %}
{% endblock %}
result:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="..." />
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="..." />
Alternatively sub-template can completly override the stylesheets block, so that only one stylesheet is generated (but it's less dry):
{% block stylesheets %}
{% stylesheets 'main.css' 'sub.css' %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{{ asset_url }}" />
{% endstylesheets %}
{% endblock %}
result (in production / non debug):
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="..." />
Upvotes: 4