This documentation was deprecated 08/01/17. Information here may be incomplete or out of date.
It's easy to customize your packing slips. We use liquid markup, along with standard HTML and CSS.
You can read below for a primer.
{{order.barcode}}
. Additionally, the order barcode css should not be overridden.<head>
or should link to an externally hosted stylesheet.These are referenced like {{order.number}}
, {{customer.logo}}
, {{order_item.sku}}
.
id
- the whiplash order idnumber
- the incoming order numberbarcode
- order barcodestatus
- order statuscreated_at
- when the order was added to whiplashupdated_at
- when the order was last updated in whiplashdate
- short format order dateshipping_address
- you can grab the shipping address all at onceship_method
- order full shipping method nameshipping_carrier
- order shipping carriershipping_service
- order shipping serviceorder_items
- the individual items in an order (see below for order item methods)total
- total order costship_price
- shipping costgrand_total
- order cost + shipping costpaid
- amount paidbalance
- remaining balancenotes
- any additional order notesnotes?
- check if there are order notesreturn_url
- URL to web-based return/exchange formdomestic?
- is this order domestic?international?
- is this order international?greeting
- attempts to return the shipping first name; falls back to "Friend"tracking_numbers
- an array of tracking numberstracking_link
- the first or only tracking link for an ordertracking_links
- a comma separated list of hyperlinked tracking numbersmeta_data
- JSON of any meta_data that has been assigned to the orderbilling_name
billing_street1
billing_street2
billing_city
billing_state
billing_state_abbr
billing_country
billing_zip
billing_phone
shipping_name
shipping_street1
shipping_street2
shipping_city
shipping_state
shipping_state_abbr
shipping_country
shipping_zip
shipping_phone
sku
- item SKUquantity
- how many were orderedweight
- item weightprice
- item pricetotal
- quantity x pricedescription
- item descriptiontitle
- item title onlyname
- customer namelogo
- customer logo imagelogo_url
- logo image URL, if you'd like to use your own image tag or CSSlogo?
- check if there is a customer logo uploadedThere are two types of markup in Liquid: Output and Tag.
{{ matched pairs of curly brackets (ie, braces) }}
{% matched pairs of curly brackets and percent signs %}
Here is a simple example of Output:
Hello {{name}}
Hello {{user.name}}
Hello {{ 'tobi' }}
Output markup takes filters. Filters are simple methods. The first parameter is always the output of the left side of the filter. The return value of the filter will be the new left value when the next filter is run. When there are no more filters, the template will receive the resulting string.
Hello {{ 'tobi' | upcase }}
Hello tobi has {{ 'tobi' | size }} letters!
Hello {{ '*tobi*' | textilize | upcase }}
Hello {{ 'now' | date: "%Y %h" }}
date
- reformat a date (syntax reference)capitalize
- capitalize words in the input sentencedowncase
- convert an input string to lowercaseupcase
- convert an input string to uppercasefirst
- get the first element of the passed in arraylast
- get the last element of the passed in arrayjoin
- join elements of the array with certain character between themsort
- sort elements of the arraymap
- map/collect an array on a given propertysize
- return the size of an array or stringescape
- escape a stringescape_once
- returns an escaped version of html without affecting existing escaped entitiesstrip_html
- strip html from stringstrip_newlines
- strip all newlines (\n) from stringnewline_to_br
- replace each newline (\n) with html breakreplace
- replace each occurrence e.g. {{ 'foofoo' | replace:'foo','bar' }} #=> 'barbar'
replace_first
- replace the first occurrence e.g. {{ 'barbar' | replace_first:'bar','foo' }} #=> 'foobar'
remove
- remove each occurrence e.g. {{ 'foobarfoobar' | remove:'foo' }} #=> 'barbar'
remove_first
- remove the first occurrence e.g. {{ 'barbar' | remove_first:'bar' }} #=> 'bar'
truncate
- truncate a string down to x characterstruncatewords
- truncate a string down to x wordsprepend
- prepend a string e.g. {{ 'bar' | prepend:'foo' }} #=> 'foobar'
append
- append a string e.g. {{ 'foo' | append:'bar' }} #=> 'foobar'
minus
- subtraction e.g. {{ 4 | minus:2 }} #=> 2
plus
- addition e.g. {{ '1' | plus:'1' }} #=> '11'
, {{ 1 | plus:1 }} #=> 2
times
- multiplication e.g {{ 5 | times:4 }} #=> 20
divided_by
- division e.g. {{ 10 | divided_by:2 }} #=> 5
split
- split a string on a matching pattern e.g. {{ "a~b" | split:"~" }} #=> ['a','b']
modulo
- remainder, e.g. {{ 3 | modulo:2 }} #=> 1
Tags are used for the logic in your template. New tags are very easy to code, so I hope to get many contributions to the standard tag library after releasing this code.
Here is a list of currently supported tags:
Comment is the simplest tag. It just swallows content.
We made 1 million dollars {% comment %} in losses {% endcomment %} this year
Raw temporarily disables tag processing. This is useful for generating content (eg, Mustache, Handlebars) which uses conflicting syntax.
{% raw %}
In Handlebars, {{ this }} will be HTML-escaped, but {{{ that }}} will not.
{% endraw %}
if / else
should be well-known from any other programming language.
Liquid allows you to write simple expressions in the if
or unless
(and
optionally, elsif
and else
) clause:
{% if user %}
Hello {{ user.name }}
{% endif %}
# Same as above
{% if user != null %}
Hello {{ user.name }}
{% endif %}
{% if user.name == 'tobi' %}
Hello tobi
{% elsif user.name == 'bob' %}
Hello bob
{% endif %}
{% if user.name == 'tobi' or user.name == 'bob' %}
Hello tobi or bob
{% endif %}
{% if user.name == 'bob' and user.age > 45 %}
Hello old bob
{% endif %}
{% if user.name != 'tobi' %}
Hello non-tobi
{% endif %}
# Same as above
{% unless user.name == 'tobi' %}
Hello non-tobi
{% endunless %}
# Check for the size of an array
{% if user.payments == empty %}
you never paid !
{% endif %}
{% if user.payments.size > 0 %}
you paid !
{% endif %}
{% if user.age > 18 %}
Login here
{% else %}
Sorry, you are too young
{% endif %}
# array = 1,2,3
{% if array contains 2 %}
array includes 2
{% endif %}
# string = 'hello world'
{% if string contains 'hello' %}
string includes 'hello'
{% endif %}
If you need more conditions, you can use the case
statement:
{% case condition %}
{% when 1 %}
hit 1
{% when 2 or 3 %}
hit 2 or 3
{% else %}
... else ...
{% endcase %}
Example:
{% case template %}
{% when 'label' %}
// {{ label.title }}
{% when 'product' %}
// {{ product.vendor | link_to_vendor }} / {{ product.title }}
{% else %}
// {{page_title}}
{% endcase %}
Often you have to alternate between different colors or similar tasks. Liquid
has built-in support for such operations, using the cycle
tag.
{% cycle 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
{% cycle 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
{% cycle 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
{% cycle 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
will result in
one
two
three
one
If no name is supplied for the cycle group, then it's assumed that multiple calls with the same parameters are one group.
If you want to have total control over cycle groups, you can optionally specify the name of the group. This can even be a variable.
{% cycle 'group 1': 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
{% cycle 'group 1': 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
{% cycle 'group 2': 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
{% cycle 'group 2': 'one', 'two', 'three' %}
will result in
one
two
one
two
Liquid allows for
loops over collections:
{% for item in array %}
{{ item }}
{% endfor %}
When iterating a hash, item[0]
contains the key, and item[1]
contains the value:
{% for item in hash %}
{{ item[0] }}: {{ item[1] }}
{% endfor %}
During every for
loop, the following helper variables are available for extra
styling needs:
forloop.length # => length of the entire for loop
forloop.index # => index of the current iteration
forloop.index0 # => index of the current iteration (zero based)
forloop.rindex # => how many items are still left?
forloop.rindex0 # => how many items are still left? (zero based)
forloop.first # => is this the first iteration?
forloop.last # => is this the last iteration?
There are several attributes you can use to influence which items you receive in your loop
limit:int
lets you restrict how many items you get.
offset:int
lets you start the collection with the nth item.
# array = [1,2,3,4,5,6]
{% for item in array limit:2 offset:2 %}
{{ item }}
{% endfor %}
# results in 3,4
Reversing the loop
{% for item in collection reversed %} {{item}} {% endfor %}
Instead of looping over an existing collection, you can define a range of numbers to loop through. The range can be defined by both literal and variable numbers:
# if item.quantity is 4...
{% for i in (1..item.quantity) %}
{{ i }}
{% endfor %}
# results in 1,2,3,4
You can store data in your own variables, to be used in output or other tags as
desired. The simplest way to create a variable is with the assign
tag, which
has a pretty straightforward syntax:
{% assign name = 'freestyle' %}
{% for t in collections.tags %}{% if t == name %}
<p>Freestyle!</p>
{% endif %}{% endfor %}
Another way of doing this would be to assign true / false
values to the
variable:
{% assign freestyle = false %}
{% for t in collections.tags %}{% if t == 'freestyle' %}
{% assign freestyle = true %}
{% endif %}{% endfor %}
{% if freestyle %}
<p>Freestyle!</p>
{% endif %}
If you want to combine a number of strings into a single string and save it to
a variable, you can do that with the capture
tag. This tag is a block which
"captures" whatever is rendered inside it, then assigns the captured value to
the given variable instead of rendering it to the screen.
{% capture attribute_name %}{{ item.title | handleize }}-{{ i }}-color{% endcapture %}
<label for="{{ attribute_name }}">Color:</label>
<select name="attributes[{{ attribute_name }}]" id="{{ attribute_name }}">
<option value="red">Red</option>
<option value="green">Green</option>
<option value="blue">Blue</option>
</select>