The Scenario
I've been using templates in Cro (documented at https://cro.services/docs/reference/cro-webapp-template), and have enjoyed that there are subs in them.
I currently have a 'main' template, and some reports, let's say report1, report2, and report3.
Let's say that, from report3, I want to include an array of report1.
Now, let's say that the reports each have the following subs:
init: Some Javascript initialisation code (that should only be included once, no matter how many instances of the report are used)
HTML: Some HTML code that should be included for each instance of the report (with a few parameters to differentiate it, but that, due to the restriction of the Javascript framework, may not contain any
<script>
or<style>
tagsdata: A snippet of Javascript that again has to be repeated for each time the report is included
Currently I have each of the above in a separate sub in the template.
The Problem
Redeclaration of symbol '&__TEMPLATE_SUB__report-initial'.
The Question
While I can pass a report name (eg. "report1") to the main template, what I'm lacking is a way to have the main template call the subs on the report name that has been passed in, since there may be multiple reports involved.
Ideas I've tried
What would be ideal is if I could somehow create a "report" class that inherits from the template, and pass instances of the template class into the main report, and then call the subs as methods on the report class. However, I've been unable to figure out a way to do this.
I can see three likely options here:
- My difficulty may be that I'm not thinking "The Cro Way". If there's a better way to achieve what I'm trying to do, please let me know
- There may be a way to achieve what I want, and I've just been unable to understand the documentation (or it may be missing)
- While unlikely, it's possible that Cro hasn't been designed with this kind of possibility in mind.
Any help anyone can provide would be appreciated.
Thanks!
Edit: I think a macro that can have multiple (named) "bodies" would solve the problem.