Table of Contents
Smarty comes with several built-in functions. These built-in functions are the integral part of the smarty template engine. You cannot create your own custom functions with the same name; and you should not need to modify the built-in functions.
A few of these functions have an assign
attribute which collects the result the function to a named template
variable instead of being output;
much like the
{assign} function.
{capture} is used to collect the output of the template between the
tags into a variable instead of displaying it. Any content between
{capture name='foo'} and {/capture} is collected
into the variable specified in the name attribute.
The captured content can be used in the
template from the variable $smarty.capture.foo
where “foo” is the value passed in the name attribute.
If you do not supply the name attribute, then “default” will
be used as the name ie $smarty.capture.default.
{capture}'s can be nested.
| Attribute Name | Type | Required | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | string | no | default | The name of the captured block |
| assign | string | No | n/a | The variable name where to assign the captured output to |
Be careful when capturing {insert}
output. If you have
$caching
enabled and you have
{insert}
commands that you expect to run
within cached content, do not capture this content.
Example 7.1. {capture} with the name attribute
{* we don't want to print a div tag unless content is displayed *}
{capture name=banner}
{include file='get_banner.tpl'}
{/capture}
{if $smarty.capture.banner ne ''}
<div id="banner">{$smarty.capture.banner}</div>
{/if}
Example 7.2. {capture} into a template variable
This example also demonstrates the
upper
modifier
{capture name=some_content assign=addrText}
The server is {$smarty.server.SERVER_NAME|upper} at {$smarty.server.SERVER_ADDR}<br>
Your ip is {$smarty.server.REMOTE_ADDR}.
{/capture}
{$addrText}
See also
$smarty.capture,
{eval},
{fetch},
fetch()
and {assign}.