NAME
Text::Xslate::Syntax::TTerse - An alternative syntax compatible with Template Toolkit 2
SYNOPSIS
use Text::Xslate;
my $tx = Text::Xslate->new(
syntax => 'TTerse',
);
print $tx->render_string(
'Hello, [% dialect %] world!',
{ dialect => 'TTerse' }
);
# PRE_PROCESS/POST_PROCESS
$tx = Text::Xslate->new(
syntax => 'TTerse',
header => ['header.tt'],
footer => ['footer.tt'],
);
DESCRIPTION
TTerse is a subset of the Template-Toolkit 2 (and partially 3) syntax, using [% ... %]
tags and %% ...
line code.
Note that TTerse itself has few methods and filters while Template-Toolkit 2 has a lot. See Text::Xslate::Bridge::*
modules on CPAN which provide extra methods and filters if you want to use those features.
(TODO: I should concentrate on the difference between Template-Toolkit 2 and TTerse)
SYNTAX
This supports a Template-Toolkit compatible syntax, although the details might be different.
Note that lower-cased keywords, which are inspired in Template-Toolkit 3, are also allowed.
Variable access
Scalar access:
[% var %]
[% $var %]
[% GET var # 'GET' is optional %]
Field access:
[% var.0 %]
[% var.field %]
[% var.accessor %]
[% var.$field ]%
[% var[$field] # TTerse specific %]
Variables may be HASH references, ARRAY references, or objects.
If $var is an object instance, you can call its methods.
[% $var.method() %]
[% $var.method(1, 2, 3) %]
[% $var.method(foo => [1, 2, 3]) %]
[% $var.method({ foo => 'bar' }) %]
Expressions
Almost the same as Text::Xslate::Syntax::Kolon, but infix:<_>
for concatenation is supported for compatibility.
Loops
[% FOREACH item IN arrayref %]
* [% item %]
[% END %]
Loop iterators are partially supported.
[% FOREACH item IN arrayref %]
[%- IF loop.is_first -%]
<first>
[%- END -%]
* [% loop.index %] # 0 origin
* [% loop.count # loop.index + 1 %]
* [% loop.body # alias to arrayref %]
* [% loop.size # loop.body.size %]
* [% loop.max_index # loop.size - 1 %]
* [% loop.peek_next # loop.body[ loop.index - 1 ]
* [% loop.peek_prev # loop.body[ loop.index + 1 ]
[%- IF loop.is_last -%]
<last>
[%- END -%]
[% END %]
Unlike Template-Toolkit, FOREACH
doesn't accept a HASH reference, so you must convert HASH references to ARRAY references by keys()
, values()
, or kv()
methods.
Template-Toolkit compatible names are also supported, but the use of them is discouraged because they are not easy to understand:
loop.max # for loop.max_index
loop.next # for loop.peek_next
loop.prev # for loop.peek_prev
loop.first # for loop.is_first
loop.last # for loop.is_last
Loop control statements, namely NEXT
and LAST
, are also supported in both FOR
and WHILE
loops.
[% FOR item IN data -%]
[% LAST IF item == 42 -%]
...
[% END -%]
Conditional statements
[% IF logical_expression %]
Case 1
[% ELSIF logical_expression %]
Case 2
[% ELSE %]
Case 3
[% END %]
[% UNLESS logical_expression %]
Case 1
[% ELSE %]
Case 2
[% END %]
[% SWITCH expression %]
[% CASE case1 %]
Case 1
[% CASE case2 %]
Case 2
[% CASE DEFAULT %]
Case 3
[% END %]
Functions and filters
[% var | f %]
[% f(var) %]
Template inclusion
The INCLUDE
statement is supported.
[% INCLUDE "file.tt" %]
[% INCLUDE $var %]
WITH variables
syntax is also supported, although the WITH
keyword is optional in Template-Toolkit:
[% INCLUDE "file.tt" WITH foo = 42, bar = 3.14 %]
[% INCLUDE "file.tt" WITH
foo = 42
bar = 3.14
%]
The WRAPPER
statement is also supported. The argument of WRAPPER
, however, must be string literals, because templates will be statically linked while compiling.
[% WRAPPER "file.tt" %]
Hello, world!
[% END %]
%%# with variable
[% WRAPPER "file.tt" WITH title = "Foo!" %]
Hello, world!
[% END %]
The content will be set into content
, but you can specify its name with the INTO
keyword.
[% WRAPPER "foo.tt" INTO wrapped_content WITH title = "Foo!" %]
...
[% END %]
This is a syntactic sugar to template cascading. Here is a counterpart of the example in Kolon.
: macro my_content -> {
Hello, world!
: }
: cascade "file.tx" { content => my_content() }
Note that the WRAPPER option (http://template-toolkit.org/docs/manual/Config.html#section_WRAPPER) in Template-Toolkit is not supported directly. Instead, you can emulate it with header
and footer
options as follows:
my %vpath = (
wrap_begin => '[% WRAPPER "base" %]',
wrap_end => '[% END %]',
base => 'Hello, [% content %] world!' . "\n",
content => 'Xslate',
);
my $tx = Text::Xslate->new(
syntax => 'TTerse',
path => \%vpath,
header => ['wrap_begin'],
footer => ['wrap_end'],
);
print $tx->render('content'); # => Hello, Xslate world!;
Macro blocks
Definition:
[% MACRO foo BLOCK -%]
This is a macro.
[% END -%]
[% MACRO add(a, b) BLOCK -%]
[% a + b -%]
[% END -%]
Call:
[% foo() %]
[% add(1, 2) %]
Unlike Template-Toolkit, calling macros requires parens (()
).
Virtual methods
A few methods are supported in the Xslate core.
%% a.size();
%% a.join(", ");
%% a.reverse();
%% h.size();
%% h.keys();
%% h.values();
%% h.kv();
However, there is a bridge mechanism that allows you to use external methods. For example, Text::Xslate::Bridge::TT2 provides the TT2 virtual methods for Xslate, which bridges Template::VMethods implementation.
use Text::Xslate::Bridge::TT2;
my $tx = Text::Xslate->new(
syntax => 'TTerse',
module => [qw(Text::Xslate::Bridge::TT2)],
);
print $tx->render_string('[% "foo".length() %]'); # => 3
See Text::Xslate::Bridge, or search for Text::Xslate::Bridge::*
on CPAN.
Misc.
CALL evaluates expressions, but does not print it.
[% CALL expr %]
SET and assignments, although the use of them are strongly discouraged.
[% SET var1 = expr1, var2 = expr2 %]
[% var = expr %]
DEFAULT statements as a syntactic sugar to SET var = var // expr
:
[% DEFAULT lang = "TTerse" %]
FILTER blocks to apply filters to text sections:
[% FILTER html -%]
Hello, <Xslate> world!
[% END -%]
COMPATIBILITY
There are some differences between TTerse and Template-Toolkit.
INCLUDE
of TTerse requires an expression for the file name, while that of Template-Toolkit allows a bare token:[% INCLUDE foo.tt # doesn't work! %] [% INCLUDE "foo.tt" # OK %]
FOREACH item = list
is forbidden in TTerse. It must beFOREACH item IN list
.TTerse does not support plugins (i.e.
USE
directive), but understands theUSE
keyword as an alias toCALL
, so you could use some simple plugins which do not depend on the context object of Template-Toolkit.use Template::Plugin::Math; use Template::Plugin::String; my $tt = Text::Xslate->new(...); mt %vars = ( Math => Template::Plugin::Math->new(), # as a namespace String => Template::Plugin::String->new(), # as a prototype ); print $tt->render_string(<<'T', \%vars); [% USE Math # does nothing actually, only for compatibility %] [% USE String %] [% Math.abs(-100) # => 100 %] [% String.new("foo").upper # => FOO %]
The following directives are not supported:
INSERT
,PROCESS
,BLOCK
as a named blocks,USE
(but see above),PERL
,RAWPERL
,TRY
,THROW
,RETURN
,STOP
,CLEAR
,META
,TAGS
,DEBUG
, andVIEW
.Some might be supported in a future.
SEE ALSO
Template (Template::Toolkit)