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Macro Calls

2023년 4월 19일 오전 10:31

Introduction

This tiddler describes the different ways in which macros can be called.

Macro Call Transclusion Shortcut

To call a macro, place <<double angle brackets>> around the name and any parameter values.

<<mymacro param:"This is the parameter value">>

By default, parameters are listed in the same order as in the macro's definition. A parameter can be labelled with its name and a colon to allow them to be listed in a different order.

If no value is specified for a parameter, the default value given for that parameter in the macro definition is used instead. (If no default value was defined, the parameter is blank).

Each parameter value can be enclosed in 'single quotes', "double quotes", """triple double quotes""" or [[double square brackets]]. Triple double quotes allow a value to contain almost anything. If a value contains no spaces or single or double quotes, it requires no delimiters.

A more formal presentation of this syntax is also available.

See some examples and discussion about parser modes.

Macro Calls with $transclude Widget

The shortcut syntax expands to the $transclude widget with the $variable attribute specifying the name of the macro to transclude.

<$transclude $variable="mymacro" param="This is the parameter value"/>

The widget itself offers greater flexibility than the shortcut syntax, including the ability to specify parameter values.

Assigning Macro Calls to Attribute Values

The result of a macro can be directly assigned to an attribute of a widget or HTML element. The result of the macro is not wikified, but the parameter substitution is performed.

<div class=<<myclasses "Horizontal">>>
...
</div>

Using Macro Calls in Filters

Macro calls can be used in filters:

<$list filter="[<mymacro param:'value'>]">
...
</$list>