NAME

Mason - Powerful, high-performance templating for the web and beyond

SYNOPSIS

foo.mc:
  % my $name = "Mason";
  Hello world! Welcome to <% $name %>.

#!/usr/local/bin/perl
use Mason;
my $mason = Mason->new(comp_root => '...');
print $mason->run('/foo')->output;

DESCRIPTION

Mason is a powerful Perl-based templating system, designed to generate dynamic content of all kinds.

Unlike many templating systems, Mason does not attempt to invent an alternate, "easier" syntax for templates. It provides a set of syntax and features specific to template creation, but underneath it is still clearly and proudly recognizable as Perl.

Mason is most often used for generating web pages. It can handle web requests directly via PSGI, or act as the view layer for a web framework such as Catalyst or Dancer.

All documentation is indexed at Mason::Manual.

The previous major version of Mason (1.x) is available under the name HTML::Mason.

SUPPORT

The mailing list is mason-users@lists.sourceforge.net. You must be subscribed to send a message. To subscribe, visit https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mason-users.

You can also visit us at #mason on irc://irc.perl.org/#mason.

Bugs and feature requests will be tracked at RT:

http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Mason
bug-mason@rt.cpan.org

The latest source code can be browsed and fetched at:

http://github.com/jonswar/perl-mason
git clone git://github.com/jonswar/perl-mason.git

The official Mason website is http://www.masonhq.com/, however it contains mostly information about Mason 1. We're not sure what the future of the website will be wrt Mason 2.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to Stevan Little and the Moose team for the awesomeness of Moose, which motivated me to create a second version of Mason years after I thought I was done.

Thanks to Tatsuhiko Miyagawa and the PSGI/Plack team, who freed me from ever worrying about server backends again.

SEE ALSO

HTML::Mason

AUTHOR

Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Jonathan Swartz.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.