Out of the box, TurboGears 1.0 supports Kid templates. TurboGears has tight integration for Kid, including an internationalization filter and the use of Kid for widgets.
To make migrating to TurboGears easier, TurboGears provides some seamless support for using other template engines, and the project maintains the TurboCheetah plugin providing support for Cheetah. Additionally, TurboGears uses a template engine plugin interface that is shared with other tools, notably Buffet for CherryPy. This provides access to a broad range of pre-built template plugins.
The plugins come in the form of Python Eggs. Once you’ve easy_install‘d the plugin, TurboGears will automatically have the ability to render the new templates. You can use the tg-admin info command to determine which template engines are currently supported by your TurboGears installation.
Each template engine has a name or “scheme” to identify it. Kid templates use the "kid" scheme. Cheetah templates use the "cheetah" scheme. By default, TurboGears uses Kid templates, but you can easily use a Cheetah template for a specific method like this:
@turbogears.expose(template="cheetah:yourpackage.templates.filename")
def index(self):
return dict(someval=5)
When rendering the output from this method, TurboGears will notice the template scheme in front and use the appropriate engine for that kind of template.
Using an alternate template engine does not affect how JSON output is handled: you can still choose to output JSON if you’ve set the allow_json flag.
You can also choose to use a specific engine for all of your application or for a specific path through the tg.defaultview config setting in config/app.cfg. Just set tg.defaultview to the name of the template engine you want. The default is "kid", but you could also set it to "cheetah", for example:
# <mypackage>/config/app.cfg [global] ... # VIEW
# which view (template engine) to use if one is not specified in the # template name tg.defaultview = “cheetah” ...