%%documentclass{article} %% %%usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} %%usepackage{fontenc} %%usepackage{alltt} %%usepackage{url,xspace} %%usepackage{tabularx} %%usepackage{theorem,ulem,float,afterpage} %%normalem %usually, don't use ulem %% %% %%input{decls} %% %%title{Howto write \surflets} %%author{Andreas Bernauer} %% %%begin{document} %%maketitle %% %%tableofcontents %%sloppy \section{Introduction} This howto gives a short introduction in how to write a \surflet. It is concentrated on the practical side rather on describing the \surflet API in detail to give you instant succes in running your own surflets. The \surflet API will be described in the SUnet documentation eventually. %\marginpar{\surflets are pieces of code for web site scripting.} For those who don't know it already, \surflets are pieces of code that can be executed interactively trough a website. There is a \surflet handler who administrates their execution and suspension and as part of the SUnet webserver. \surflets ease the implementation of web applications in two ways, compared to other server-side scripting tools like Java\texttrademark Servlets or Microsoft\textregistered Active Server Pages or PHP: \begin{enumerate} \item \surflets have an automatic program flow control like any other usual program, \ie the web designer doesn't have to care about session management at all. The sequence of the web pages result from their appearance in the program like the print statements in any other usual program. \item \surflets come along with a library for robust user interaction. \surflets represent interaction elements of the web page like text input fields or dropdown lists in the \surflet program by specific objects. A web designer can plug in these objects into a website and use them to read out the user input. \end{enumerate} The following sections probably assume that you have basic knowledge of the SUnet webserver and scsh. The environment variable \typew{\$sunet} refers to the top level directory of your sunet installation. On my system this is \name{/home/andreas/sw/sunet}. \section{How to run the SUnet webserver that handles \surflets} The following sections will show pieces of \surflet code you might want to try out. Therefore you need the SUnet webserver running with the ability to serve \surflets. This section tells you how to do it. \begin{enumerate} \item You need Oleg's SSAX package (for scsh), to be able to use surflets: \begin{itemize} \item Download Oleg's SSAX package from \url{http://prdownloads.sf.net/ssax/ssax-sr5rs-plt200-4.9.tar.gz?download}. \item Uncompress and untar it to any directory. This will create a directory called \name{SSAX}, to which I will refer to as \typew{\$SSAX}. \item Unfortunately, this SSAX distribution (plt200-4.9) has a typo in the package definition for scsh. Apply the patch that comes with the \surflets distribution to get rid of this typo: \begin{itemize} \item \typew{cd \$SSAX} \item \typew{patch -p1 < \$sunet/httpd/surflets/SSAX-goodhtml-patch} \end{itemize} \end{itemize} \item You can start the SUnet webserver along with the \surflet-handler now. The \surflets distribution comes with a script that does this for you: \begin{itemize} \item \typew{cd \$sunet/httpd/surflets} \item \typew{SSAX=\$SSAX ./start-surflet-server} \end{itemize} Please be patient, scsh has to load a lot of libraries. If the loading succeeds you will see something like this: \begin{alltt} [andreas@hgt surflets]\$ ssax=/home/andreas/sw/SSAX ./start-surflet-server Loading... reading options: () Going to run SUrflet server with: htdocs-dir: /home/andreas/sw/sunet/httpd/surflets/web-server/root/htdocs surflet-dir: /home/andreas/sw/sunet/httpd/surflets/web-server/root/surflets images-dir: /home/andreas/sw/sunet/httpd/surflets/web-server/root/img port: 8008 log-file-name: /home/andreas/sw/sunet/httpd/surflets/web-server/httpd.log a maximum of 5 simultaneous requests, syslogging activated, and home-dir-handler (public_html) activated. NOTE: This is the SUrflet server. It does not support cgi. \end{alltt} This means the server is up and running. Try to connect to \url{http://localhost:8008} with your browser and you will see the welcome page of the \surflets. You can also already try out some of \surflets that come with the distribution. You will probably notice a long response time the first time you load the first \surflet. This is because the server has to load the \surflet libraries. The server handles further requests to \surflets faster. If the port the \surflet server tries to use is occupied use, you will see an error message similar to this one: \begin{alltt} Error: 98 "Address already in use" #{Procedure 11701 (\%bind in scsh-level-0)} 4 2 (0 . 8008) \end{alltt} In this case, pass another port number to the script, \eg 8000: \codex{ssax=\$SSAX ./start-surflet-server -p 8000} The \typew{--help} option will show you more parameters that you can adjust, but you won't need them for this howto. \end{enumerate} \section{How to send web pages} This section will discuss some of the various ways in which you can send a web page to a browser that contacted your \surflet. \subsection{My first \surflet} \label{sec:first-surflet} Traditionally, your first program in any programming language prints something like ``Hello, World!''. We follow this tradition: \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (send-html/finish '(html (body (h1 "Hello, world!"))))) )) \end{listing} You can either save a file with that content in the \surflets directory the server mentioned at startup or you can use the file \name{howto/hello.scm} that comes along with the \surflets distribution and which is located in the server's standard \surflets directory. Let's go through the small script step by step: \begin{alltt} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface \end{alltt} This defines a module named \name{surflet} which implements the interface \name{surflet-interface}. \name{surflet-interface} just states that the module exports a function named \name{main} to which we will come shortly. For those of you who know about the scsh module system: Yes, \surflets are basically scsh modules that are loaded dynamically during run time. \begin{alltt} (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) \end{alltt} The \name{open} form lists all the modules the \surflet needs. You will probably always need the two modules that are stated here (namely \name{surflets} and \name{scheme-with-scsh}). If you need other modules, like \name{srfi-13} for string manipulation, this is the place where you want to state it. \begin{alltt} (begin \end{alltt} This just opens the body of the \surflet. All your \surflet code goes here.\footnote{If you know about scsh modules, you probably also know that there is a \name{file} clause that you could use to place the code in a file instead or along with the \name{begin} clause.} \begin{alltt} (define (main req) \end{alltt} Here is the \name{main} function that the interface declared this \surflet will implement. The \name{main} function is the entry point to your \surflet: The server calls this function every time a user browses to your \surflet the first time. The server calls \name{main} with one argument: a representation of the inital request of the browser. We don't have to worry about that at this point. \begin{alltt} (send-html/finish '(html (body (h1 "Hello, world!"))))) )) \end{alltt} \name{send-html/finish} is one of three function you will regularly use to send web pages to the browser. The other two functions are \name{send-html} and \name{send-html/suspend}. \name{send-html/finish} -- as the name already suggests -- sends a HTML page to the browser and finishes the \surflet. \name{send-html} just sends the HTML page and does not return and \name{send-html/suspend} sends the HTML page and suspends the \surflet, \ie it waits until the user continues with the \surflet, \eg by submitting a webform. We will discuss \name{send-html} and \name{send-html/suspend} in detail later. I will refer to these three functions as the \emph{sending functions}. In a \surflet, HTML pages are represented as lists, or, to be more precise, as SXML (S-expression based XML).\label{sec:SXML} The first element of a SXML list is a symbol stating the HTML tag. The other elements of a SXML list are the contents that are enclosed by this HTML tag. The contents can be other SXML list, too. Here are some examples of SXML lists and how they translate to HTML: \newcommand{\htmltag}[1]{$\mathtt{<}$#1$\mathtt{>}$} \begin{tabbing} HTML: \medskip\=\kill SXML: \> \texttt{'(p "A paragraph.")} \\ HTML: \> \texttt{\htmltag{p}A paragraph.\htmltag{/p}}\\ \\ SXML: \> \texttt{'(p "A paragraph." (br) "With break line.")} \\ HTML: \> \texttt{\htmltag{p}A paragraph.\htmltag{br}With break line.\htmltag{/p}}\\ \\ SXML: \> \texttt{'(p "Nested" (p "paragraphs"))}\\ HTML: \> \texttt{\htmltag{p}Nested\htmltag{p}paragraphs\htmltag{/p}\htmltag{/p}}\\ \end{tabbing} Attributes are stated by a special list whose first element is the at-symbol. The attribute list must be the second element in the list: \begin{tabbing} HTML: \medskip\=\kill SXML: \> \texttt{'(a (@ (href "attr.html")) "Attributed HTML tags.")} \\ HTML: \> \texttt{\htmltag{a href="attr.html"}Attributed HTML tags.\htmltag{/a}}\\ \\ SXML: \> \texttt{'(a (@ (href "attr2.html") (target "\_blank")) "2 attributes.")} \\ HTML: \> \texttt{\htmltag{a href="attr2.html" target="\_blank"}2 attributes.\htmltag{/a}} \end{tabbing} As you see from the \surflet example, \name{send-html/finish} expects as an argument SXML. In the example, the SXML translates to the following HTML code: \begin{alltt}

Hello, world!

\end{alltt} Please note, that there is no check for valid HTML or even XHTML here. The only thing the translation process takes care of are special characters in strings like the ampersand (\typew{\&}). The translation process replaces them by their HTML representation (\eg, \typew{\&}) so you don't have to worry about that when you use strings. Everything else like using valid HTML tags or valid attributes is your responsibility. \subsection{Dynamic content} Let's extend our first \surflet example by some dynamic content, \eg by displaying the current time using scsh's \name{format-date} function. As the HTML page is basically represented as a list, this can be done like this: \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (send-html/finish `(html (body (h1 "Hello, world!") (p "The current date and time is " ,(format-date "~H:~M:~S ~p ~m/~d/~Y" (date))))))) )) \end{listing} This \surflet can be found in \name{howto/hello-date.scm}. The beginning of this \surflet is the same as in the previous example. The difference lies in the argument to \name{send-html/finish}. Note that the argument starts with a backquote (\typew{`}) rather than with a regular quote (\typew{'}) as in the previous example. Instead of passing a ``static'' list, \ie a list whose contents are given before execution, this \surflet uses the quasiquote and unquote feature of Scheme to create a ``dynamic'' list, \ie list whose contents are given only during execution. A ``dynamic'' list is introduced by a backquote (\typew{`}) and its dynamic contents are noted by commata (\typew{,}). Thus, if the \surflet is executed while I am writing this howto, the argument to \name{send-html/finish} above is translated to \begin{alltt} '(html (body (h1 "Hello, world!") (p "The current date and time is " "13:09:03 PM 11/18/2003"))))) \end{alltt} \noindent\emph{before} it is passed to \name{send-html/finish}. Thus, using dynamic content can be easily done with Scheme's quasiquote and unquote feature. Of course, you can build your list in any way you want; the quasiquote notation is just a convenient way to do it. \subsection{Several web pages in a row} The previous example \surflets only showed one page and finished afterwards. Here, we want to present to web pages in a row. We use the previously mentioned function \name{send-html/suspend}, which suspends after it has send the page and continues when the user clicked for the next page. In contrast to \name{send-html/finish}, that expected SXML, \name{send-html/suspend} expects a function that takes an argument and returns SXML. The parameter the function gets (here: \name{k-url} is the URL that points to the next page:\footnote{In the API this URL is called the \emph{continuation URL}.} \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (body (h1 "Hello, world!") (p (a (@ (href ,k-url)) "Next page -->")))))) (send-html/finish '(html (body (h1 "Hello, again!"))))) )) \end{listing} This \surflet can be found in \name{howto/hello-twice.scm}. This example first displays a web page with the message ``Hello, world!'' and a link to the next page labeled with ``Next page --$>$''. When the user clicks on the provided link, \name{send-html/suspend} returns and the the next statement after the call to \name{send-html/suspend} is executed. Here it is \name{send-html/finish} which shows a web page with the message ``Hello, again!''. When \name{send-html/suspend} returns, (almost) the complete context of the running \surflet is restored. Thus, every variable in the \surflet will retain its value during suspension. The consequence is that you don't have to worry about sessions, sesssion variables and alike. The user can freely use the back button of her browser or clone a window while the \surflet will keep on responding in the expected way. This is all automatically managed by the \surflet-handler. The only exception are variables whose values are changed by side effects, \eg if you change a variable via \name{set!}. These variables keep their modified values, allowing communication between sessions of the same \surflet.\footnote{If you want to change a variable via side effects but you don't want to interfere with other session, you can use \name{set-session-data!} and \name{get-session-data}. See the API documentation for further information.} \subsection{Begin and end of sessions} So far I don't have mentioned too much details about sessions. The reason is, as mentioned before, that the \surflet handler takes of the session automatically as described in the previous paragraph. %, \ie it starts the session automatically when an %instance of your \surflet starts and takes care of the saving and %restoring of all variable values during suspensions of your \surflet %instance, except for \typew{set!}ed values. The only thing you have to worry about is when your session \emph{ends}. As long as your session hasn't been finished by \name{send-html/finish}, the user can move freely between the web pages your \surflet provides. Once you've finished the session via \name{send-html/finish}, this freedom ends. As the session is over, the user will get an error message when he tries to recall some web page from the server. The server will tell the user about the possible reasons for the error (namely that most likely the session was finished) and provides a link to the beginning of a new session. Thus, \name{send-html/suspend} suspends the current execution of a \surflet, returning with the request for the next web page of your \surflet and \name{send/finish} finishes the session. The third sending function is \name{send-html} which just sends a web page. \name{send-html} does not return and does not touch the session of your \surflet instance. \subsection{Abbreviations in SXML} \label{sxml-abbrvs} The example in subsection ``Several web pages in a row'' wrote down the link to the next web page explicitly via the ``a''-tag. As websites contain a lot of links, the sending functions (like \name{send-html/finish}) allow an abbreviation. The following SXML snippets are equivalent: \begin{alltt} (a (@ (href ,k-url)) "Next page -->") (url ,k-url "Next page -->") \end{alltt} \name{url} expects the target address as the next element and includes every text afterwards as part of the link. There are also some other abbreviations. \typew{(nbsp)} inserts `\typew{\ }' into the HTML, \typew{(*COMMENT* \dots)} inserts a comment, and with \typew{(plain-html \dots)} you can insert arbitrary HTML code (\ie strings) directly , without any string conversions. The last abbreviation, \name{surflet-form}, is discussed in the next section. \section{How to write web forms} The \surflets come along with a libary for easy user interaction. The following subsections will show how to write web forms and how to get the data the user has entered. \subsection{Simple web forms} Let's write a \surflet that reads user input and prints it out on the next page: \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (let* ((text-input (make-text-field)) (submit-button (make-submit-button)) (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (body (h1 "Echo") (surflet-form ,k-url (p "Please enter something:" ,text-input ,submit-button))))))) (bindings (get-bindings req)) (user-input (input-field-value text-input bindings))) (send-html/finish `(html (body (h1 "Echo result") (p "You've entered: '" ,user-input "'.")))))) )) \end{listing} Here are the details to the code in \name{main}: \begin{alltt} (define (main req) (let* ((text-input (make-text-field)) (submit-button (make-submit-button)) \end{alltt} \name{make-text-field} and \name{make-submit-button} define two user interaction elements: a text input field and a submit button. \surflets represent user interaction elements by \name{Input-field} objects. Thus, user interaction elements are first class values in \surflet, unlike in many other web scripting languages, \eg Java surflets, PHP or Microsoft Active Server Pages, \ie you have a representation of a user interaction element in your program that you can pass to functions, receive them as return values, etc. You'll see soon the advantages of this approach. \begin{alltt} (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (body (h1 "Echo") (surflet-form ,k-url (p "Please enter something:" ,text-input ,submit-button))))))) \end{alltt} Instead of discarding the return value of \name{send-html/suspend} as in the examples of the previous section, this time we'll save the return value, as it will contain the data the user has entered in our text input field. The definition of the website is as described in the previous section except for the new abbreviation \name{surflet-form}. \name{surflet-form} creates the HTML code for a web form and expects as its next value the URL to the next webpage as provided by \name{send-html/suspend}, here named \name{k-url}. The remaining arguments constitute the content of the web form. Thus, the code above is equal to the following SXML: \begin{alltt} (form (@ (action ,k-url) (method "GET")) (p "Please enter something:" ,text-input ,submit-button)) \end{alltt} If you want to use the POST method instead of the default GET method, add the symbol \name{'POST} after the URL: \begin{alltt} (surflet-form ,k-url POST (p "Please enter something:" ,text-input ,submit-button)) \end{alltt} The web page \name{send-html/suspend} sends to the browser looks like in figure [missing] %\ref{fig:user1-1}. After the user has entered his data into the web form, \name{send-html/suspend} returns with the request object of the browser for the next page. This request object contains the data the user has entered. \begin{alltt} (bindings (get-bindings req)) \end{alltt} With the function \name{get-bindings} we pull out the user data of the request object. Here we save the user data into the variable \name{bindings}. \name{get-bindings} works for both request methods \typew{GET} and \typew{POST}. \begin{alltt} (user-input (input-field-value text-input bindings))) \end{alltt} With the function \name{input-field-value} and the extracted user data we can read the value for an \name{input-field}. Here, we want to know what the user has entered into the \name{text-input-field}. \begin{alltt} (send-html/finish `(html (body (h1 "Echo result") (p "You've entered: '" ,user-input "'.")))))) \end{alltt} After we have extracted what the user has entered into the text field, we can show the final page of our \surflet and echo her input. The scheme for user interaction is thus about the following: \begin{itemize} \item Create the user interaction elements, \name{input-field}s, you want to use in your web page. \item Send the web page with \name{send-html/suspend} to the browser. Plug in the \name{input-field}s in the web page as if they were usual values. Save the return value of \name{send-html/suspend}. \item Extract the user data from the return value of \name{send-html/suspend}. \item Read the values of each \name{input-field} out of the extracted user data with \name{input-field-value}. \end{itemize} The complete list of functions that create \name{input-fields} can be found in the API. \subsection{Return types other than strings} \label{subsec:input-return} As the user interaction elements are first class values in a \surflet, they can return other types than strings. For example the \surflets come with a number input field, \ie a input field that accepts only text that can be interpreted as a number. If the user enters something that is not a number, \name{input-field-value} will return \sharpf as the value of the number input field. If you'd rather want an error to be raised, you can use \name{raw-input-field-value} instead. \subsubsection{Annotated input fields} The return value of an input field need not even be a primitive value. The \surflets library allows you to ``annotate'' your input fields with values which should be returned indicated by the user's input. \Eg, consider this \surflet: \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets handle-fatal-error scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (let* ((select-input-field (make-select (map make-annotated-select-option '("Icecream" "Chocolate" "Candy") '(1.5 2.0 0.5)))) (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (head (title "Sweet Store")) (body (h1 "Your choice") (surflet-form ,k-url (p "Select the sweet you want:" ,select-input-field) ,(make-submit-button))))))) (bindings (get-bindings req)) (price (input-field-value select-input-field bindings))) (send-html/finish `(html (head (title "Receipt")) (body (h2 "Your receipt:") (p "This costs you \$" ,price ".")))))) )) \end{listing} Let's go through the important part of this \surflet: \begin{alltt} (let* ((select-input-field (make-select (map make-annotated-select-option '("Icecream" "Chocolate" "Candy") '(1.5 2.0 0.5)))) \end{alltt} Here we define a select input field (a dropdown list). Instead of only providing a list of values that shall show up in the dropdown list and later examining which one was select and looking up the price for the sweet, we bind the values in the list with the price while we create the select input field. When the select input field is shown in the browser, it will show the names of the sweets. When we lookup the user's input, we will get the associated price for the sweet. Again, this works not only with numbers, but with any arbitrary Scheme value (\eg functions or records). \subsection{Sending error messages} If a user tries to forge a \surflet-URL (\eg by extracting the continuation URL from the HTML source and editing it), your \surflet has to deal with unexpected values. Usually, a forged \surflet-URL will result in an error that is raised in one of the \surflet library functions. If you don't catch this error, the \surflet handler will catch it for you, send an error message to the user \emph{and terminating the current session} as your \surflet obviously encountered an unexpected error and might be in an invalid state. If you don't want this behavior, you can catch this error (like any other error that is raised by \scsh) and send your own error message with \name{send-error} which is located in the \name{surflets/error} package. The \name{handle-fatal-error} package can be useful in this context. Here's an example, that modifies the example from the previous subsection (modifications emphasized): \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets \codemph{ handle-fatal-error surflets/error} scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (let* ((select-input-field (make-select (map make-annotated-select-option '("Icecream" "Chocolate" "Candy") '(1.5 2.0 0.5)))) (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (head (title "Sweet Store")) (body (h1 "Your choice") (surflet-form ,k-url (p "Select the sweet you want:" ,select-input-field) ,(make-submit-button))))))) (bindings (get-bindings req)) \codemph{ (cost (with-fatal-error-handler (lambda (condition decline) (send-error (status-code bad-request) req "No such option or internal error. Please try again.")) (raw-input-field-value select-input-field bindings))))} (send-html/finish `(html (head (title "Receipt")) (body (h2 "Your receipt:") (p "This costs you \$" ,cost ".")))))) )) \end{listing} Let's examine the important part of this example: \begin{alltt} (cost (with-fatal-error-handler (lambda (condition decline) (send-error (status-code bad-request) req "No such option or internal error. Please try again.")) (raw-input-field-value select-input-field bindings)))) \end{alltt} As mentioned in \ref{subsec:input-return}, this \surflet uses \name{raw-input-field-value} instead of \name{input-field-value} because the former raises an error while the latter returns \sharpf in case of an error. If a user forges a continuation URL, \name{raw-input-field-value} might not be able to find a valid value for the \name{select-input-field} and raises an error. This error is catched by the error handler which was installed by \name{with-fatal-error-handler}. The error handler uses \name{send-error} to send an error message to the browser. Its first argument is the status code of the error message. See the documentation of the \sunet webserver for different status codes. The second argument is the request which was processed while the error occured. The last argument is a free message text to explain the cause of the error to the user. While in the original \surflet the user will still see the resulting receipt web page with an empty dollar amount and has her session finished, this modified version will show an error message and won't finish the session. It is your choice, which version you choose, \ie if you let the \surflet handler handle the occuring error automatically or if you install your own error handlers and use \name{raw-input-field-value}. However, be careful if you use \name{raw-input-field-value} along with check boxes. The HTML standard dictates that an unchecked check box does not appear in the data the browser sends to the server. Thus, \name{raw-input-field-value} won't find the check box in the data and raise an error which is not a ``real'' error as you migh expect it. \subsection{Your own input fields} The \surflet library contains constructors for all input fields that are described in the HTML~2.0 standard. See the \surflet API for a complete list. The \surflet library also allows you to create your own input fields, \eg an input field that only accepts valid dates as its input. This subsection gives you a short overview how to do this. You will find the details in the \surflet API. Let's have a look at an \surflet that uses its own input field. The ``input field'', called nibble input field, consists of eight check boxes which represent bits of a nibble (half a byte). The value of the input field is the number that the check boxes represent. \Eg, if the user checks the last two checkboxes, the value of the nibble input field is 3. \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets surflets/my-input-fields scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (make-nibble-input-fields) (let ((checkboxes (list (make-annotated-checkbox 8) (make-annotated-checkbox 4) (make-annotated-checkbox 2) (make-annotated-checkbox 1)))) (make-multi-input-field #f "nibble-input" (lambda (input-field bindings) (let loop ((sum 0) (checkboxes checkboxes)) (if (null? checkboxes) sum (loop (+ sum (or (input-field-value (car checkboxes) bindings) 0)) (cdr checkboxes))))) '() (lambda (ignore) checkboxes)))) (define nibble-input-field (make-nibble-input-fields)) (define (main req) (let* ((req (send-html/suspend (lambda (new-url) `(html (title "Nibble Input Widget") (body (h1 "Nibble Input Widget") (p "Enter your nibble (msb left):") (surflet-form ,new-url ,nibble-input-field ,(make-submit-button))))))) (bindings (get-bindings req)) (number (input-field-value nibble-input-field bindings))) (send-html `(html (title "Result") (body (h2 "Result") (p "You've entered " ,number ".")))))) )) \end{listing} Let's go through this \surflet step by step. \begin{alltt} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets surflets/my-input-fields scheme-with-scsh) \end{alltt} If you want to create your own input fields, you have to open the \name{surflets/my-input-fields} package. \begin{alltt} (begin (define (make-nibble-input-fields) (let ((checkboxes (list (make-annotated-checkbox 8) (make-annotated-checkbox 4) (make-annotated-checkbox 2) (make-annotated-checkbox 1)))) \end{alltt} \name{make-nibble-input-fields} is the constructor for our new type of input field. As mentioned before, we use check boxes to let the user enter the nibble. We use annotated checkboxes for this purpose whose value is the value in the nibble. \begin{alltt} (make-multi-input-field #f "nibble-input" \end{alltt} The value of our new input field will depend on the value of several real input fields. Thus we create a multi input field. If the value depended only on the browser data that is associated to the name of our input field, we would use \name{make-input-field} instead, which creates a usual input field. \Eg, if we wanted to create a date input field that accepts only valid dates as input and used a text input field for this purpose, we would use \name{make-input-field}. The first two parameters is the name of the input field and its type. As we use checkboxes to represent our input field, we don't need the name field. The type field is meant for debugging purposes, so you can identify the type of the input field during a debugging session. \begin{alltt} (lambda (input-field bindings) (let loop ((sum 0) (checkboxes checkboxes)) (if (null? checkboxes) sum (loop (+ sum (or (input-field-value (car checkboxes) bindings) 0)) (cdr checkboxes))))) \end{alltt} The next parameter is the so called transformer function. \name{raw-input-field-value} calls the transformer function to determine the value of the input field depending on the given bindings. The transformer function of a multi input field (which our nibble input field is) gets the input field and the bindings as parameters. A usual input field would only get the data that is associated to its name. The transformer function of our nibble input field goes over each check box, looks it up in the bindings and adds its value to a sum, if \name{input-field-value} can find it. If it can't find it, a zero is added instead. The value of our nibble input field is the resulting sum. The rest of the \surflet is straight forward and not repeated here again. We create, use and evaluate the nibble input field as we do with every other input field. \section{Program flow control} With the techniques shown so far it is rather difficult to create a web page that has several different successor webpages rather than only one web page. This section will show you how to do this with the \surflets. Basically, there are two different methods how to perform this task. One method is to mark each link in some way and evaluate the mark after \name{send-html/suspend} has returned. The other method is to bind a callback function to each link that is called when the user selects the link. This section shows both methods. \subsection{Dispatching to more than one successor web page} The basic idea of dispatching is to add a mark to a link and evaluate it after the user has clicked on a link and \name{send-html/suspend} returned. Let's have a look at an example. It shows an entry page at which the user states the language in which she wants to be greeted: \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (let* ((english (make-address)) (german (make-address)) (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (head (title "Multi-lingual")) (body (h2 "Select your language:") (ul (li (url ,(english k-url) "English") (li (url ,(german k-url) "Deutsch"))))))))) (bindings (get-bindings req))) (case-returned-via bindings ((english) (result-page "Hello, how are you?")) ((german) (result-page "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?"))))) (define (result-page text) (send-html/finish `(html (head (title "Greeting")) (body (h2 ,text))))) )) \end{listing} Let's see how \name{main} presents the different options: \begin{alltt} (define (main req) (let* ((english (make-address)) (german (make-address)) \end{alltt} Of course you don't have to worry about adding the mark to the links. Instead, we create the links with \name{make-address}. \begin{alltt} (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (head (title "Multi-lingual")) (body (h2 "Select your language:") (ul (li (url ,(english k-url) "English") (li (url ,(german k-url) "Deutsch"))))))))) \end{alltt} \name{make-address} returns a function you can call to create the link as we did here with \begin{alltt} (li (url ,(english k-url) "English") \end{alltt} This creates a list item which contains a hyperlink labeled ``English''. The hyperlink is created by the SXML abbreviation \name{url} as shown in \ref{sxml-abbrvs}. Instead of just passing the continuation URL \name{k-url} to \name{url}, we create the marked link by calling the function \name{make-adddress} gave us. \begin{alltt} (bindings (get-bindings req))) (case-returned-via bindings ((english) (result-page "Hello, how are you?")) ((german) (result-page "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?"))))) \end{alltt} After \name{send-html/suspend} has returned, we can evaluate which link the user has clicked by using \name{case-returned-via}. \name{case-returned-via} works similar to the regular \name{case} of Scheme. It evaluates the body of the form whose initial list contains the address that the user used to leave the website. \Eg, if the user has selected ``German'' as her preferred language and thus clicked on the link we have named \name{german} in our \surflet, \name{case-returned-via} will evaluate its second form and the \surflet will display the greeting in German. \name{case-returned-via} is syntactic sugar like the regular \name{case}. However, instead of \name{equal?} it uses \name{returned-via}. \name{returned-via} takes the bindings and and an address and returns \sharpt, if the user left the web page via this address (\ie, via the link that is represented by this address) and \sharpf otherwise. \name{returned-via} does not end with a question mark as it might return other values as well as we will see shortly. Of course, it is your choice if you want to use \name{case-returned-via} or explicitly \name{returned-via}. \subsection{Annotated dispatching} The approach shown in the previous subsection has one major drawback: the meaning of an address becomes clear only when you look at the dispatching section of \name{case-returned-via}. This subsection shows you how to link the meaning and the representation of an address closer together. We modify the previous code example slightly to this \surflet (differences emphasized): \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (let* (\codemph{(language (make-annotated-address))} (req (send-html/suspend (lambda (k-url) `(html (head (title "Multi-lingual")) (body (h2 "Select your language:") (ul (li (url ,\codemph{(language k-url "Hello, how are you?")} "English") (li (url ,\codemph{(language k-url "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?")} "Deutsch"))))))))) (bindings (get-bindings req))) (case-returned-via bindings \codemph{ ((language) => result-page))))} (define (result-page text) (send-html/finish `(html (head (title "Greeting")) (body (h2 ,text))))) )) \end{listing} Let's look at the differing parts: \begin{alltt} (let* ((language (make-annotated-address)) \end{alltt} To link the meaning with the address itself, we use an annotated address. As we can annotate the address now, we don't need two distinct addresses anymore. \begin{alltt} (li (url ,(language k-url "Hello, how are you?") "English") (li (url ,(language k-url "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?") "Deutsch"))))))))) \end{alltt} In addition to the continuation URL \name{k-url} we also annotate the address with a value. Here we use the different greetings as the annotation. The address can be annotated with any arbitrary Scheme value, \eg functions or records. \begin{alltt} (case-returned-via bindings ((language) => result-page)))) \end{alltt} \name{case-returned-via} has an extended syntax similar to \name{cond} that it useful with annotated address. The arrow `\name{=>}' calls the following function with the annotation of the address via which the user has left the web page. You can extract the annotation yourself with \name{returned-via} like this: \begin{alltt} (result-page (returned-via language bindings)) \end{alltt} This will call \name{result-page} with the annotation of the address via which the user has left the web page. \name{returned-via} returns \sharpf, if the user didn't leave the web page via one of the links created with this address (which is not really possible in this example). \subsection{Callbacks} The other method to lead to different successor web pages is using callbacks. A callback is a function that is called if the user leaves the web page via an associated link. This is different from the dispatch method where \name{send-html/suspend} returns. You can create a web page that only uses callbacks to lead to successor web page and thus you don't have to use \name{send-html/suspend}. Instead, you can use \name{send-html}. Although it is possible to use several different callbacks in a single web page, this is not recommended. The reason lies in the implementation of a callback, which saves the current continuation. Several different callbacks would result in the storage of the several slightly different continuations. This is unnecessary, as you can annotate the callbacks with the arguments for the callback function. Let's see an example which is a variation of the previous examples (important parts / differences emphasized): \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets \codemph{surflets/callbacks} scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (let ((language \codemph{(make-annotated-callback result-page)})) (\codemph{send-html} `(html (head (title "Multi-lingual")) (body (h2 "Select your language:") (ul (li (url ,\codemph{(language "Hello, how are you?")} "English") (li (url ,\codemph{(language "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?")} "Deutsch"))))))))) (define \codemph{(result-page req text)} (send-html/finish `(html (head (title "Greeting")) (body (h2 ,text))))) )) \end{listing} The differences to the dispatch method are the following: you have to open the \name{surflets/callbacks} package to use callbacks, you don't use the continuation URL to create the callback link, and the callbacked function must accept the request from the browser as the first argument. Furthermore, you don't have to use \name{send-html/suspend}, if a user can only leave your web page via callbacks. However, it can be sensible to combine the dispatch and the callback method, so you have to use \name{send-html/suspend}. Note that is nonsensical to create a callback on top level, \ie the call to \name{make-annotated-callback} must occur every time \name{main} is called and not only once when the \surflet is read into memory. For the same reason it is nonsensical in most cases to reuse a callback. The \surflet library provides also a wrapper function with which you can instruct the callback to call different functions instead of a single one. If you create your callback like \begin{alltt} (let ((callback (make-annotated-callback callback-function))) \dots) \end{alltt} you can instruct the callback to call different functions like this: \begin{alltt} (callback function1 arg1 arg2) \dots (callback function2 arg3 arg4 arg5) \end{alltt} Again, it is your choice which option you want to use. Note that calling a function with several arguments and of different amount each time is also possible if you only use a single function for the callback. \section{Data management} When you write web programs, there are usually two kinds of data that you use: data that is local to each instance of a \surflet, \eg the users login, and data that is global to each instance of a \surflet, \eg a port to a logfile. Changes to local data is only visible to each instance of a \surflet, while changes to global data is visible to every instance of a \surflet. The \surflet library does not really distinguish between these two types of data, but provides ways to realize both of them in a convenient way that is not (really) different from the way you handle this data types in a regular Scheme program. If a data item is globally used in your \surflet, define it global (on top level) and change its values with \name{set!}. If a data item is locally used, define it locally (in your function) and do not change its value with \name{set!}. If the following sounds too technical to you, you can safely skip this paragraph. The reason why the distinction between global and local data is done via whether you mutate the data's value with \name{set!} is that the \surflets are implemented with continuations. Continuations cannot reflect changes that are done via \name{set!} (or side effects in general) and thus such changes are globally visible. On the other hand continuations represent states of a program and a reified continuations reifies also the values of all (local) data. But what to do if you happen to want to change your \emph{local} data's value with \name{set!}? The \surflet library provides a place where you store such mutable local data and two functions to access it: \name{set-session-data!} sets the mutable local data and \name{get-session-data} reads the mutable local data. Here is an example. It uses the callback technique that was presented in the previous section. If you haven't read that section, you only need to know that \name{show-page} is called again and again as long as the user keeps on clicking on ``Click''. \begin{listing} (define-structure surflet surflet-interface (open surflets surflets/callbacks scheme-with-scsh) (begin (define (main req) (set-session-data! -1) (let ((start (make-annotated-callback show-page))) (show-page req 'click start))) (define (show-page req what callback) (if (eq? what 'click) (click callback) (cancel))) (define (click callback) (set-session-data! (+ 1 (get-session-data))) (send-html `(html (head (title "Click counter")) (body (h2 "Click or cancel") (p "You've already clicked " ,(get-session-data) " times.") (p (url ,(callback 'click callback) "Click") (url ,(callback 'cancel callback) "Cancel")))))) (define (cancel) (send-html/finish `(html (head (title "Click counter finished")) (body (h2 "Finished") (p "after " ,(get-session-data) " clicks."))))) )) \end{listing} At the beginning of \name{main} we initialize the mutable local data with \name{set-session-data!}. \begin{alltt} (define (main req) (set-session-data! -1) (let ((start (make-annotated-callback show-page))) (show-page req 'click start))) \end{alltt} Afterwards, we create and save a callback that will be called again and again. We call \name{show-page} with the callback to show the first web page. \begin{alltt} (define (show-page req what callback) (if (eq? what 'click) (click callback) (cancel))) \end{alltt} \name{show-page} evaluates its second argument \name{what} to determine what to do next: continue or cancel. \begin{alltt} (define (click callback) (set-session-data! (+ 1 (get-session-data))) (send-html `(html (head (title "Click counter")) (body (h2 "Click or cancel") (p "You've already clicked " ,(get-session-data) " times.") (p (url ,(callback 'click callback) "Click") (url ,(callback 'cancel callback) "Cancel")))))) \end{alltt} If the user continues, \name{click} increases the mutable local counter and shows the next page. Note that we don't use \name{send-html/suspend} here because we use the callback to lead to the next web page. If the user clicks on the link labeled with ``Click'' or ``Cancel'', \name{show-page} will be called with \typew{'click} or \typew{'cancel}, respectively, and the callback as parameters. This creates an endless loop without saving endless states of the \surflet. \name{cancel} shows the final page with the amount of clicks performed. \section{My own SXML} Section \ref{sec:SXML} introduced SXML, the way how \surflets represent HTML. This section will show you, how you can create your own rules to translate from SXML to HTML. \subsection{Terms and theoretical background} This subsection will introduce the main concepts of the translation process and some necessary terms we will use in the following. The translation process from SXML to HTML takes two steps. In the first step, SXML is translated to an intermediate form. This is done by the \textit{translator}. In the second step, the intermediate form is translated into an HTML string. This is done by the \textit{printer}. The intermediate form looks very much like SXML, but contains only atoms or, recursively, list of \textit{atoms}. Atoms are numbers, characters, strings, \sharpf, and the empty list. We call the intermediate form an \textit{atom tree} and the list from which we've started an \textit{SXML tree}. The basic unit in the translation process is a \textit{conversion rule}. A conversion rule consists of a trigger and a conversion function. The translator calls the conversion function when it sees the trigger at the beginning of a list in the SXML tree, \ie at a node. It calls the conversion function with the all list elements as parameters and replaces the whole list by the result of the conversion function. The result of the conversion function is supposed to be an atom tree. The translator gets the SXML tree and a list of conversion rules as arguments. It then traverses the SXML tree depth first and calls the conversion functions according to the triggers it encounters, replacing the nodes in the SXML tree with the result of the conversion functions it called for each node. The result of this translation step will be an atom tree, which the printer will print to a port. There are exceptions to this basic rules. First, the translator might not traverse the whole SXML tree. If the translator traverses the whole tree, every argument to a conversion function is first translated before it is passed to the conversion function. This is the regular case and we say the conversion function gets its arguments \textit{preprocessed}. However, the conversion rule can instruct the translator not to preprocess the conversion function's arguments and pass the arguments as they are in the SXML tree, \ie \textit{unprocessed}. In that case, the translator will stop traversing the SXML tree at that node and replacing the whole node by the result of the conversion function called for this node. Second, there are two default triggers which you can't use in your translation rules: \typew{*default*} and \typew{*text*}. The conversion rule that uses \typew{*default*} as its trigger is the default conversion rule which the translator uses if no other conversion rule triggers for a node in the SXML tree. The conversion rule that uses \typew{*text*} as its trigger is the text conversion rule and triggers, if the node in the SXML tree is a string. In the standard conversion rule set the text conversion rule performs HTML escaping, \eg for the ampersand (\&). \section{Outlook} More to come soon about\surflets containing of different parts and individual SXML. %\end{document} %session data %surflets containing of different parts %my sxml