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Template::Alloy(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Template::Alloy(3) |
Template::Alloy - TT2/3, HT, HTE, Tmpl, and Velocity Engine
my $t = Template::Alloy->new(
INCLUDE_PATH => ['/path/to/templates'],
);
my $swap = {
key1 => 'val1',
key2 => 'val2',
code => sub { 42 },
hash => {a => 'b'},
};
# print to STDOUT
$t->process('my/template.tt', $swap)
|| die $t->error;
# process into a variable
my $out = '';
$t->process('my/template.tt', $swap, \$out);
### Alloy uses the same syntax and configuration as Template::Toolkit
my $t = Template::Alloy->new(
filename => 'my/template.ht',
path => ['/path/to/templates'],
);
my $swap = {
key1 => 'val1',
key2 => 'val2',
code => sub { 42 },
hash => {a => 'b'},
};
$t->param($swap);
# print to STDOUT (errors die)
$t->output(print_to => \*STDOUT);
# process into a variable
my $out = $t->output;
### Alloy can also use the same syntax and configuration as HTML::Template
my $t = Template::Alloy->new;
my $swap = {
key1 => 'val1',
key2 => 'val2',
code => sub { 42 },
hash => {a => 'b'},
};
$t->set_delimiters('#[', ']#');
$t->set_strip(0);
$t->set_values($swap);
$t->set_dir('/path/to/templates');
my $out = $t->parse_file('my/template.tmpl');
my $str = "Foo #[echo $key1]# Bar";
my $out = $t->parse_string($str);
### Alloy uses the same syntax and configuration as Text::Tmpl
my $t = Template::Alloy->new;
my $swap = {
key1 => 'val1',
key2 => 'val2',
code => sub { 42 },
hash => {a => 'b'},
};
my $out = $t->merge('my/template.vtl', $swap);
my $str = "#set($foo 1 + 3) ($foo) ($bar) ($!baz)";
my $out = $t->merge(\$str, $swap);
my $t = Template::Alloy->new;
my $swap = {
key1 => 'val1',
key2 => 'val2',
code => sub { 42 },
hash => {a => 'b'},
};
my $out = '';
$t->process_js('my/template.jstem', $swap, \$out);
my $str = "[% var foo = 1 + 3; write('(' + foo + ') (' + get('key1') + ')'); %]";
my $out = '';
$t->process_js(\$str, $swap, \$out);
"An alloy is a homogeneous mixture of two or more elements"
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloy).
Template::Alloy represents the mixing of features and capabilities
from all of the major mini-language based template systems (support for
non-mini-language based systems will happen eventually). With
Template::Alloy you can use your favorite template interface and syntax and
get features from each of the other major template systems. And
Template::Alloy is fast - whether your using mod_perl, CGI, or running from
the commandline. There is even Template::Alloy::JS for getting a little more
speed when that is necessary.
Template::Alloy happened by accident (accidentally on purpose).
The Template::Alloy (Alloy hereafter) was originally a part of the CGI::Ex
suite that performed simple variable interpolation. It used TT2 style
variables in TT2 style tags "[% foo.bar %]". That was all the
original Template::Alloy did. This was fine and dandy for a couple of years.
In winter of 2005-2006 Alloy was revamped to add a few features. One thing
led to another and soon Alloy provided for most of the features of TT2 as
well as some from TT3. Template::Alloy now provides a full-featured
implementation of the Template::Toolkit language.
After a move to a new company that was using HTML::Template::Expr
and Text::Tmpl templates, support was investigated and interfaces for
HTML::Template, HTML::Template::Expr, Text::Tmpl, and Velocity (VTL) were
added. All of the various engines offer the same features - each using a
different syntax and interface.
More recently, the Template::Alloy::JS capabilities were
introduced to bring Javascript templates to the server side (along with an
increase in speed if ran in persistent environments).
Template::Toolkit brought the most to the table. HTML::Template
brought the LOOP directive. HTML::Template::Expr brought more vmethods and
using vmethods as top level functions. Text::Tmpl brought the COMMENT
directive and encouraged speed matching (Text::Tmpl is almost entirely C
based and is very fast). The Velocity engine brought AUTO_EVAL and
SHOW_UNDEFINED_INTERP.
Most of the standard Template::Toolkit documentation covering
directives, variables, configuration, plugins, filters, syntax, and vmethods
should apply to Alloy just fine (This pod tries to explain everything - but
there is too much). See Template::Alloy::TT for a listing of the differences
between Alloy and TT.
Most of the standard HTML::Template and HTML::Template::Expr
documentation covering methods, variables, expressions, and syntax will
apply to Alloy just fine as well.
Most of the standard Text::Tmpl documentation applies, as does the
documentation covering Velocity (VTL).
So should you use Template::Alloy ? Well, try it out. It may give
you no visible improvement. Or it could.
Template::Alloy uses a recursive regex based grammar (early versions during the
CGI::Ex::Template phase did not). This allows for the embedding of opening and
closing tags inside other tags (as in [% a = "[% 1 + 2 %]" ; a|eval
%]). The individual methods such as parse_expr and play_expr may be used by
external applications to add TT style variable parsing to other applications.
The regex parser returns an AST (abstract syntax tree) of the
text, directives, variables, and expressions. All of the different template
syntax options compile to the same AST format. The AST is composed only of
scalars and arrayrefs and is suitable for sending to JavaScript via JSON or
sharing with other languages. The parse_tree method is used for returning
this AST.
Once at the AST stage, there are two modes of operation. Alloy can
either operate directly on the AST using the Play role, or it can compile
the AST to perl code via the Compile role, and then execute the code. To use
the perl code route, you must set the COMPILE_PERL flag to 1. If you are
running in a cached-in-memory environment such as mod_perl, this is the
fastest option. If you are running in a non-cached-in-memory environment,
then using the Play role to run the AST is generally faster. The AST method
is also more secure as cached AST won't ever eval any "perl"
(assuming PERL blocks are disabled - which is the default).
Template::Alloy has split out its functionality into discrete roles. In
Template::Toolkit, this functionality is split into separate classes. The
roles in Template::Alloy simply add on more methods to the main class. When
Perl 6 arrives, these roles will be translated into true Roles.
The following is a list of roles used by Template::Alloy.
Template::Alloy::Compile - Compile-to-perl role
Template::Alloy::HTE - HTML::Template::Expr role
Template::Alloy::Operator - Operator role
Template::Alloy::Parse - Parse-to-AST role
Template::Alloy::Play - Play-AST role
Template::Alloy::Stream - Stream output role
Template::Alloy::Tmpl - Text::Tmpl role
Template::Alloy::TT - Template::Toolkit role
Template::Alloy::Velocity - Velocity role
Template::Alloy::VMethod - Virtual methods role
Template::Alloy::JS - Javascript functionality - available separately
Template::Alloy automatically loads the roles when they are needed
or requested - but not sooner (with the exception of the Operator role and
the VMethod role which are always needed and always loaded). This is good
for a CGI environment. In mod_perl you may want to preload a role to make
the most of shared memory. You may do this by passing either the role name
or a method supplied by that role.
# import roles necessary for running TT
use Template::Alloy qw(Parse Play Compile TT);
# import roles based on methods
use Template::Alloy qw(parse_tree play_tree compile_tree process);
Note: importing roles by method names does not import them into
that namespace - it is autoloading the role and methods into the
Template::Alloy namespace. To help make this more clear you may use the
following syntax as well.
# import roles necessary for running TT
use Template::Alloy load => qw(Parse Play Compile TT);
# import roles based on methods
use Template::Alloy load => qw(process parse_tree play_tree compile_tree);
# import roles based on methods
use Template::Alloy
Parse => 1,
Play => 1,
Compile => 1,
TT => 1;
Even with all roles loaded Template::Alloy is still relatively
small. You can load all of the roles (except the JS role) by passing
"all" to the use statement.
use Template::Alloy 'all';
# or
use Template::Alloy load => 'all';
# or
use Template::Alloy all => 1;
As a final option, Template::Alloy also includes the ability to
stand-in for other template modules. It is able to do this because it
supports the majority of the interface of the other template systems. You
can do this in the following way:
use Template::Alloy qw(Text::Tmpl HTML::Template);
# or
use Template::Alloy load => qw(Text::Tmpl HTML::Template);
# or
use Template::Alloy
'Text::Tmpl' => 1,
'HTML::Template' => 1;
Note that the use statement will die if any of the passed module
names are already loaded and not subclasses of Template::Alloy. This will
avoid thinking that you are using Template::Alloy when you really aren't.
Using the 'all' option won't automatically do this - you must mention the
"stood-in" modules by name.
The following modules may be "stood-in" for:
Template
Text::Tmpl
HTML::Template
HTML::Template::Expr
This feature is intended to make using Template::Alloy with
existing code easier. Most cases should work just fine. Almost all syntax
will just work (except Alloy may make some things work that were previously
broken). However Template::Alloy doesn't support 100% of the interface of
any of the template systems. If you are using
"features-on-the-edge" then you may need to re-write portions of
your code that interact with the template system.
The following section lists most of the publicly available methods. Some less
commonly used public methods are listed later in this document.
- "new"
-
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new({
INCLUDE_PATH => ['/my/path/to/content', '/my/path/to/content2'],
});
Arguments may be passed as a hash or as a hashref. Returns a
Template::Alloy object.
There are currently no errors during Template::Alloy object
creation. If you are using the HTML::Template interface, this is
different behavior. The document is not parsed until the output or
process methods are called.
- "process"
- This is the TT interface for starting processing. Any errors that result
in the template processing being stopped will be stored and available via
the ->error method.
my $t = Template::Alloy->new;
$t->process($in, $swap, $out)
|| die $t->error;
Process takes three arguments.
The $in argument can be any one
of:
String containing the filename of the template to be processed.
The filename should be relative to INCLUDE_PATH. (See
INCLUDE_PATH, ABSOLUTE, and RELATIVE configuration items). In
memory caching and file side caching are available for this type.
A reference to a scalar containing the contents of the template to be processed.
A coderef that will be called to return the contents of the template.
An open filehandle that will return the contents of the template when read.
The $swap argument should be hashref
containing key value pairs that will be available to variables swapped
into the template. Values can be hashrefs, hashrefs of hashrefs and so
on, arrayrefs, arrayrefs of arrayrefs and so on, coderefs, objects, and
simple scalar values such as numbers and strings. See the section on
variables.
The $out argument can be any one
of:
undef - meaning to print the completed template to STDOUT.
String containing a filename. The completed template will be placed in the file.
A reference to a string. The contents will be appended to the scalar reference.
A coderef. The coderef will be called with the contents as a single argument.
An object that can run the method "print". The contents will be passed as
a single argument to print.
An arrayref. The contents will be pushed onto the array.
An open filehandle. The contents will be printed to the open handle.
Additionally - the $out argument can
be configured using the OUTPUT configuration item.
The process method defaults to using the "cet"
syntax which will parse TT3 and most TT2 documents. To parse HT or HTE
documents, you must pass the SYNTAX configuration item to the
"new" method. All calls to process would then default to HTE
syntax.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(SYNTAX => 'hte');
- "process_simple"
- Similar to the process method but with the following restrictions:
The $in parameter is limited to a
filename or a reference a string containing the contents.
The $out parameter may only be a
reference to a scalar string that output will be appended to.
Additionally, the following configuration variables will be
ignored: VARIABLES, PRE_DEFINE, BLOCKS, PRE_PROCESS, PROCESS,
POST_PROCESS, AUTO_RESET, OUTPUT.
- "error"
- Should something go wrong during a "process" command, the error
that occurred can be retrieved via the error method.
$obj->process('somefile.html', {a => 'b'}, \$string_ref)
|| die $obj->error;
- "output"
- HTML::Template way to process a template. The output method requires that
a filename, filehandle, scalarref, or arrayref argument was passed to the
new method. All of the HT calling conventions for new are supported. The
key difference is that Alloy will not actually process the template until
the output method is called.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(filename => 'myfile.html');
$obj->param(\%swap);
print $obj->output;
See the HTML::Template documentation for more information.
The output method defaults to using the "hte" syntax
which will parse HTE and HT documents. To parse TT3 or TT2 documents,
you must pass the SYNTAX configuration item to the "new"
method. All calls to process would then default to TT3 syntax.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(SYNTAX => 'tt3');
Any errors that occur during the output method will die with
the error as the die value.
- "param"
- HTML::Template way to get or set variable values that will be used by the
output method.
my $val = $obj->param('key'); # get one value
$obj->param(key => $val); # set one value
$obj->param(key => $val, key2 => $val2); # set multiple
$obj->param({key => $val, key2 => $val2}); # set multiple
See the HTML::Template documentation for more information.
Note: Alloy does not support the die_on_bad_params
configuration. This is because Alloy does not resolve variable names
until the output method is called.
- "define_vmethod"
- This method is available for defining extra Virtual methods or filters.
This method is similar to Template::Stash::define_vmethod.
Template::Alloy->define_vmethod(
'text',
reverse => sub { my $item = shift; return scalar reverse $item },
);
- "register_function"
- This is the HTML::Template way of defining text vmethods. It is the same
as calling define_vmethod with "text" as the first argument.
Template::Alloy->register_function(
reverse => sub { my $item = shift; return scalar reverse $item },
);
- "define_directive"
- This method can be used for adding new directives or overridding existing
ones.
Template::Alloy->define_directive(
MYDIR => {
parse_sub => sub {}, # parse additional items in the tag
play_sub => sub {
my ($self, $ref, $node, $out_ref) = @_;
$$out_ref .= "I always say the same thing!";
return;
},
is_block => 1, # is this block like
is_postop => 0, # not a post operative directive
no_interp => 1, # no interpolation in this block
continues => undef, # it doesn't "continue" any other directives
},
);
Now with a template like:
my $str = "([% MYDIR %]This is something[% END %])";
Template::Alloy->new->process(\$str);
You will get:
(I always say the same thing!)
We'll add more details in later revisions of this
document.
- "define_syntax"
- This method can be used for adding another syntax to or overriding
existing ones in the list of choices available in Alloy. The syntax can be
chosen by the SYNTAX configuration item.
Template::Alloy->define_syntax(
my_uber_syntax => sub {
my $self = shift;
local $self->{'V2PIPE'} = 0;
local $self->{'V2EQUALS'} = 0;
local $self->{'PRE_CHOMP'} = 0;
local $self->{'POST_CHOMP'} = 0;
local $self->{'NO_INCLUDES'} = 0;
return $self->parse_tree_tt3(@_);
},
);
The subroutine that is used must return an opcode tree (AST)
that can be played by the execute_tree method.
- "define_operator"
- This method allows for adding new operators or overriding existing ones.
Template::Alloy->define_operator({
type => 'right', # can be one of prefix, postfix, right, left, none, ternary, assign
precedence => 84, # relative precedence for resolving multiple operators without parens
symbols => ['foo', 'FOO'], # any mix of chars can be used for the operators
play_sub => sub {
my ($one, $two) = @_;
return "You've been foo'ed ($one, $two)";
},
});
You can then use it in a template as in the following:
my $str = "[% 'ralph' foo 1 + 2 * 3 %]";
Template::Alloy->new->process(\$str);
You will get:
You've been foo'ed (ralph, 7)
Future revisions of this document will include more samples.
This is an experimental feature and the API will probably change.
- "dump_parse_tree"
- This method allows for returning a Data::Dumper dump of a parsed template.
It is mainly used for testing.
- "dump_parse_expr"
- This method allows for returning a Data::Dumper dump of a parsed variable.
It is mainly used for testing.
- "import"
- All of the arguments that can be passed to "use" that are listed
above in the section dealing with ROLES, can be used with the import
method.
# import by role
Template::Alloy->import(qw(Compile Play Parse TT));
# import by method
Template::Alloy->import(qw(compile_tree play_tree parse_tree process));
# import by "stand-in" class
Template::Alloy->import('Text::Tmpl', 'HTML::Template::Expr');
As mentioned in the ROLE section - arguments passed to import
are not imported into current namespace. Roles and methods are only
imported into the Template::Alloy namespace.
This section discusses how to use variables and expressions in the TT
mini-language.
A variable is the most simple construct to insert into the TT mini
language. A variable name will look for the matching value inside
Template::Alloys internal stash of variables which is essentially a hash
reference. This stash is initially populated by either passing a hashref as
the second argument to the process method, or by setting the
"VARIABLES" or "PRE_DEFINE" configuration variables.
If you are using either the HT or the HTE syntax, the VAR, IF,
UNLESS, LOOP, and INCLUDE directives will accept a NAME attribute which may
only be a single level (non-chained) HTML::Template variable name, or they
may accept an EXPR attribute which may be any valid TT3 variable or
expression.
The following are some sample ways to access variables.
### some sample variables
my %vars = (
one => '1.0',
foo => 'bar',
vname => 'one',
some_code => sub { "You passed me (".join(', ', @_).")" },
some_data => {
a => 'A',
bar => 3234,
c => [3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9],
vname => 'one',
},
my_list => [20 .. 50],
cet => Template::Alloy->new,
);
### pass the variables into the Alloy process
$cet->process($template_name, \%vars)
|| die $cet->error;
### pass the variables during object creation (will be available to every process call)
my $cet = Template::Alloy->new(VARIABLES => \%vars);
Once you have variables defined, they can be used directly in the template by
using their name in the stash. Or by using the GET directive.
[% foo %]
[% one %]
[% GET foo %]
Would print when processed:
bar
1.0
bar
To access members of a hashref or an arrayref, you can chain
together the names using a ".".
[% some_data.a %]
[% my_list.0] [% my_list.1 %] [% my_list.-1 %]
[% some_data.c.2 %]
Would print:
A
20 21 50
4
If the value of a variable is a code reference, it will be called.
You can add a set of parenthesis and arguments to pass arguments. Arguments
are variables and can be as complex as necessary.
[% some_code %]
[% some_code() %]
[% some_code(foo) %]
[% some_code(one, 2, 3) %]
Would print:
You passed me ().
You passed me ().
You passed me (bar).
You passed me (1.0, 2, 3).
If the value of a variable is an object, methods can be called
using the "." operator.
[% cet %]
[% cet.dump_parse_expr('1 + 2').replace('\s+', ' ') %]
Would print something like:
Template::Alloy=HASH(0x814dc28)
$VAR1 = [ [ undef, '+', '1', '2' ], 0 ];
Each type of data (string, array and hash) have virtual methods
associated with them. Virtual methods allow for access to functions that are
commonly used on those types of data. For the full list of built in virtual
methods, please see the section titled VIRTUAL METHODS
[% foo.length %]
[% my_list.size %]
[% some_data.c.join(" | ") %]
Would print:
3
31
3 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 9
It is also possible to "interpolate" variable names
using a "$". This allows for storing the name of a variable inside
another variable. If a variable name is a little more complex it can be
embedded inside of "${" and "}".
[% $vname %]
[% ${vname} %]
[% ${some_data.vname} %]
[% some_data.$foo %]
[% some_data.${foo} %]
Would print:
1.0
1.0
1.0
3234
3234
In Alloy it is also possible to embed any expression
(non-directive) in "${" and "}" and it is possible to
use non-integers for array access. (This is not available in TT2)
[% ['a'..'z'].${ 2.3 } %]
[% {ab => 'AB'}.${ 'a' ~ 'b' } %]
[% color = qw/Red Blue/; FOR [1..4] ; color.${ loop.index % color.size } ; END %]
Would print:
c
AB
RedBlueRedBlue
To define variables during processing, you can use the = operator. In most cases
this is the same as using the SET directive.
[% a = 234 %][% a %]
[% SET b = "Hello" %][% b %]
Would print:
234
Hello
It is also possible to create arrayrefs and hashrefs.
[% a = [1, 2, 3] %]
[% b = {key1 => 'val1', 'key2' => 'val2'} %]
[% a.1 %]
[% b.key1 %] [% b.key2 %]
Would print:
2
val1 val2
It is possible to set multiple values in the same SET
directive.
[% SET a = 'A'
b = 'B'
c = 'C' %]
[% a %] [% b %] [% c %]
Would print:
A B C
It is also possible to unset variables, or to set members of
nested data structures.
[% a = 1 %]
[% SET a %]
[% b.0.c = 37 %]
([% a %])
[% b.0.c %]
Would print
()
37
The following are the types of literals (numbers and strings) and constructors
(hash and array constructs) allowed in Alloy. They can be used as arguments to
functions, in place of variables in directives, and in place of variables in
expressions. In Alloy it is also possible to call virtual methods on literal
values.
- Integers and Numbers.
-
[% 23423 %] Prints an integer.
[% 3.14159 %] Prints a number.
[% pi = 3.14159 %] Sets the value of the variable.
[% 3.13159.length %] Prints 7 (the string length of the number)
Scientific notation is supported.
[% 314159e-5 + 0 %] Prints 3.14159.
[% .0000001.fmt('%.1e') %] Prints 1.0e-07
Hexadecimal input is also supported.
[% 0xff + 0 %] Prints 255
[% 48875.fmt('%x') %] Prints beeb
- Single quoted strings.
- Returns the string. No variable interpolation happens.
[% 'foobar' %] Prints "foobar".
[% '$foo\n' %] Prints "$foo\\n". # the \\n is a literal "\" and an "n"
[% 'That\'s nice' %] Prints "That's nice".
[% str = 'A string' %] Sets the value of str.
[% 'A string'.split %] Splits the string on ' ' and returns the list.
Note: virtual methods can only be used on literal strings in
Alloy, not in TT.
You may also embed the current tags in strings (Alloy
only).
[% '[% 1 + 2 %]' | eval %] Prints "3"
- Double quoted strings.
- Returns the string. Variable interpolation happens.
[% "foobar" %] Prints "foobar".
[% "$foo" %] Prints "bar" (assuming the value of foo is bar).
[% "${foo}" %] Prints "bar" (assuming the value of foo is bar).
[% "foobar\n" %] Prints "foobar\n". # the \n is a newline.
[% str = "Hello" %] Sets the value of str.
[% "foo".replace('foo','bar') %] Prints "bar".
Note: virtual methods can only be used on literal strings in
Alloy, not in TT.
You may also embed the current tags in strings (Alloy
only).
[% "[% 1 + 2 %]" | eval %] Prints "3"
- Array Constructs.
-
[% [1, 2, 3] %] Prints something like ARRAY(0x8309e90).
[% array1 = [1 .. 3] %] Sets the value of array1.
[% array2 = [foo, 'a', []] %] Sets the value of array2.
[% [4, 5, 6].size %] Prints 3.
[% [7, 8, 9].reverse.0 %] Prints 9.
Note: virtual methods can only be used on array contructs in
Alloy, not in TT.
- Quoted Array Constructs.
-
[% qw/1 2 3/ %] Prints something like ARRAY(0x8309e90).
[% array1 = qw{Foo Bar Baz} %] Sets the value of array1.
[% qw[4 5 6].size %] Prints 3.
[% qw(Red Blue).reverse.0 %] Prints Blue.
Note: this works in Alloy and is planned for TT3.
- Hash Constructs.
-
[% {foo => 'bar'} %] Prints something like HASH(0x8305880)
[% hash = {foo => 'bar', c => {}} %] Sets the value of hash.
[% {a => 'A', b => 'B'}.size %] Prints 2.
[% {'a' => 'A', 'b' => 'B'}.size %] Prints 2.
[% name = "Tom" %]
[% {Tom => 'You are Tom',
Kay => 'You are Kay'}.$name %] Prints You are Tom
Note: virtual methods can only be used on hash contructs in
Alloy, not in TT.
- Regex Constructs.
-
[% /foo/ %] Prints (?-xism:foo)
[% a = /(foo)/i %][% "FOO".match(a).0 %] Prints FOO
Note: this works in Alloy and is planned for TT3.
Virtual methods (vmethods) are a TT feature that allow for operating on the
swapped template variables.
This document shows some samples of using vmethods. For a full
listing of available virtual methods, see Template::Alloy::VMethod.
Expressions are one or more variables or literals joined together with
operators. An expression can be used anywhere a variable can be used with the
exception of the variable name in the SET directive, and the filename of
PROCESS, INCLUDE, WRAPPER, and INSERT.
For a full listing of operators, see
Template::Alloy::Operator.
The following section shows some samples of expressions. For a
full list of available operators, please see the section titled
OPERATORS.
[% 1 + 2 %] Prints 3
[% 1 + 2 * 3 %] Prints 7
[% (1 + 2) * 3 %] Prints 9
[% x = 2 %] # assignments don't return anything
[% (x = 2) %] Prints 2 # unless they are in parens
[% y = 3 %]
[% x * (y - 1) %] Prints 4
This section contains the alphabetical list of DIRECTIVES available in Alloy.
DIRECTIVES are the "functions" and control structures that work in
the various mini-languages. For further discussion and examples beyond what is
listed below, please refer to the TT directives documentation or to the
appropriate documentation for the particular directive.
The examples given in this section are done using the
Template::Toolkit syntax, but can be done in any of the various syntax
options. See Template::Alloy::TT, Template::Alloy::HTE,
Template::Alloy::Tmpl, and Template::Alloy::Velocity.
[% IF 1 %]One[% END %]
[% FOREACH a = [1 .. 3] %]
a = [% a %]
[% END %]
[% SET a = 1 %][% SET a = 2 %][% GET a %]
In TT multiple directives can be inside the same set of '[%' and
'%]' tags as long as they are separated by space or semi-colons (;) (The
Alloy version of Tmpl allows multiple also - but none of the other syntax
options do). Any block directive that can also be used as a post-operative
directive (such as IF, WHILE, FOREACH, UNLESS, FILTER, and WRAPPER) must be
separated from preceding directives with a semi-colon if it is being used as
a block directive. It is more safe to always use a semi-colon. Note:
separating by space is only available in Alloy but is a planned TT3
feature.
[% SET a = 1 ; SET a = 2 ; GET a %]
[% SET a = 1
SET a = 2
GET a
%]
[% GET 1
IF 0 # is a post-operative
GET 2 %] # prints 2
[% GET 1;
IF 0 # it is block based
GET 2
END
%] # prints 1
The following is the list of directives.
- "BLOCK"
- Saves a block of text under a name for later use in PROCESS, INCLUDE, and
WRAPPER directives. Blocks may be placed anywhere within the template
being processed including after where they are used.
[% BLOCK foo %]Some text[% END %]
[% PROCESS foo %]
Would print
Some text
[% INCLUDE foo %]
[% BLOCK foo %]Some text[% END %]
Would print
Some text
Anonymous BLOCKS can be used for capturing.
[% a = BLOCK %]Some text[% END %][% a %]
Would print
Some text
Anonymous BLOCKS can be used with macros.
- "BREAK"
- Alias for LAST. Used for exiting FOREACH and WHILE loops.
- "CALL"
- Calls the variable (and any underlying coderefs) as in the GET method, but
always returns an empty string.
- "CASE"
- Used with the SWITCH directive. See the "SWITCH" directive.
- "CATCH"
- Used with the TRY directive. See the "TRY" directive.
- "CLEAR"
- Clears any of the content currently generated in the innermost block or
template. This can be useful when used in conjunction with the TRY
statement to clear generated content if an error occurs later.
- "COMMENT"
- Will comment out any text found between open and close tags. Note, that
the intermediate items are still parsed and END tags must align - but the
parsed content will be discarded.
[% COMMENT %]
This text won't be shown.
[% IF 1 %]And this won't either.[% END %]
[% END %]
- "CONFIG"
- Allow for changing the value of some compile time and runtime
configuration options.
[% CONFIG
ANYCASE => 1
PRE_CHOMP => '-'
%]
The following compile time configuration options may be
set:
ANYCASE
AUTO_EVAL
AUTO_FILTER
CACHE_STR_REFS
ENCODING
INTERPOLATE
POST_CHOMP
PRE_CHOMP
SEMICOLONS
SHOW_UNDEFINED_INTERP
SYNTAX
V1DOLLAR
V2EQUALS
V2PIPE
The following runtime configuration options may be set:
ADD_LOCAL_PATH
CALL_CONTEXT
DUMP
VMETHOD_FUNCTIONS
STRICT (can only be enabled, cannot be disabled)
If non-named parameters as passed, they will show the current
configuration:
[% CONFIG ANYCASE, PRE_CHOMP %]
CONFIG ANYCASE = undef
CONFIG PRE_CHOMP = undef
- "DEBUG"
- Used to reset the DEBUG_FORMAT configuration variable, or to turn DEBUG
statements on or off. This only has effect if the DEBUG_DIRS or DEBUG_ALL
flags were passed to the DEBUG configuration variable.
[% DEBUG format '($file) (line $line) ($text)' %]
[% DEBUG on %]
[% DEBUG off %]
- "DEFAULT"
- Similar to SET, but only sets the value if a previous value was not
defined or was zero length.
[% DEFAULT foo = 'bar' %][% foo %] => 'bar'
[% foo = 'baz' %][% DEFAULT foo = 'bar' %][% foo %] => 'baz'
- "DUMP"
- DUMP inserts a Data::Dumper printout of the variable or expression. If no
argument is passed it will dump the entire contents of the current
variable stash (with private keys removed).
The output also includes the current file and line number that
the DUMP directive was called from.
See the DUMP configuration item for ways to customize and
control the output available to the DUMP directive.
[% DUMP %] # dumps everything
[% DUMP 1 + 2 %]
- "ELSE"
- Used with the IF directive. See the "IF" directive.
- "ELSIF"
- Used with the IF directive. See the "IF" directive.
- "END"
- Used to end a block directive.
- "EVAL"
- Same as the EVALUATE directive.
- "EVALUATE"
- Introduced by the Velocity templating language. Parses and processes the
contents of the passed item. This is similar to the eval filter, but
Velocity needs a directive. Named arguments may be used for re-configuring
the parser. Any of the items that can be passed to the CONFIG directive
may be passed here.
[% EVALUATE "[% 1 + 3 %]" %]
[% foo = "bar" %]
[% EVALUATE "<TMPL_VAR foo>" SYNTAX => 'ht' %]
- "FILTER"
- Used to apply different treatments to blocks of text. It may operate as a
BLOCK directive or as a post operative directive. Alloy supports all of
the filters in Template::Filters. The lines between scalar virtual methods
and filters is blurred (or non-existent) in Alloy. Anything that is a
scalar virtual method may be used as a FILTER.
TODO - enumerate the at least 7 ways to pass and use
filters.
- '|'
- Alias for the FILTER directive. Note that | is similar to the '.' in
Template::Alloy. Therefore a pipe cannot be used directly after a variable
name in some situations (the pipe will act only on that variable). This is
the behavior employed by TT3. To get the TT2 behavior for a PIPE, use the
V2PIPE configuration item.
- "FINAL"
- Used with the TRY directive. See the "TRY" directive.
- "FOR"
- Alias for FOREACH
- "FOREACH"
- Allows for iterating over the contents of any arrayref. If the variable is
not an arrayref, it is automatically promoted to one.
[% FOREACH i IN [1 .. 3] %]
The variable i = [% i %]
[%~ END %]
[% a = [1 .. 3] %]
[% FOREACH j IN a %]
The variable j = [% j %]
[%~ END %]
Would print:
The variable i = 1
The variable i = 2
The variable i = 3
The variable j = 1
The variable j = 2
The variable j = 3
You can also use the "=" instead of "IN"
or "in".
[% FOREACH i = [1 .. 3] %]
The variable i = [% i %]
[%~ END %]
Same as before.
Setting into a variable is optional.
[% a = [1 .. 3] %]
[% FOREACH a %] Hi [% END %]
Would print:
hi hi hi
If the item being iterated is a hashref and the FOREACH does
not set into a variable, then values of the hashref are copied into the
variable stash.
[% FOREACH [{a => 1}, {a => 2}] %]
Key a = [% a %]
[%~ END %]
Would print:
Key a = 1
Key a = 2
The FOREACH process uses the Template::Alloy::Iterator class
to handle iterations (It is compatible with Template::Iterator). During
the FOREACH loop an object blessed into the iterator class is stored in
the variable "loop".
The loop variable provides the following information during a
FOREACH:
index - the current index
max - the max index of the list
size - the number of items in the list
count - index + 1
number - index + 1
first - true if on the first item
last - true if on the last item
next - return the next item in the list
prev - return the previous item in the list
odd - return 1 if the current count is odd, 0 otherwise
even - return 1 if the current count is even, 0 otherwise
parity - return "odd" if the current count is odd, "even" otherwise
The following:
[% FOREACH [1 .. 3] %] [% loop.count %]/[% loop.size %] [% END %]
Would print:
1/3 2/3 3/3
The iterator is also available using a plugin. This allows for
access to multiple "loop" variables in a nested FOREACH
directive.
[%~ USE outer_loop = Iterator(["a", "b"]) %]
[%~ FOREACH i = outer_loop %]
[%~ FOREACH j = ["X", "Y"] %]
[% outer_loop.count %]-[% loop.count %] = ([% i %] and [% j %])
[%~ END %]
[%~ END %]
Would print:
1-1 = (a and X)
1-2 = (a and Y)
2-1 = (b and X)
2-2 = (b and Y)
FOREACH may also be used as a post operative directive.
[% "$i" FOREACH i = [1 .. 5] %] => 12345
- "GET"
- Return the value of a variable or expression.
[% GET a %]
The GET keyword may be omitted.
[% a %]
[% 7 + 2 - 3 %] => 6
See the section on VARIABLES.
- "IF (IF / ELSIF / ELSE)"
- Allows for conditional testing. Expects an expression as its only
argument. If the expression is true, the contents of its block are
processed. If false, the processor looks for an ELSIF block. If an ELSIF's
expression is true then it is processed. Finally it looks for an ELSE
block which is processed if none of the IF or ELSIF's expressions were
true.
[% IF a == b %]A equaled B[% END %]
[% IF a == b -%]
A equaled B
[%- ELSIF a == c -%]
A equaled C
[%- ELSE -%]
Couldn't determine that A equaled anything.
[%- END %]
IF may also be used as a post operative directive.
[% 'A equaled B' IF a == b %]
Note: If you are using HTML::Template style documents, the
TMPL_IF tag parses using the limited HTML::Template parsing rules.
However, you may use EXPR="" to embed a TT3 style
expression.
- "INCLUDE"
- Parse the contents of a file or block and insert them. Variables defined
or modifications made to existing variables are discarded after a template
is included.
[% INCLUDE path/to/template.html %]
[% INCLUDE "path/to/template.html" %]
[% file = "path/to/template.html" %]
[% INCLUDE $file %]
[% BLOCK foo %]This is foo[% END %]
[% INCLUDE foo %]
Arguments may also be passed to the template:
[% INCLUDE "path/to/template.html" a = "An arg" b = "Another arg" %]
Filenames must be relative to INCLUDE_PATH unless the ABSOLUTE
or RELATIVE configuration items are set.
Multiple filenames can be passed by separating them with a
plus, a space, or commas (TT2 doesn't support the comma). Any supplied
arguments will be used on all templates.
[% INCLUDE "path/to/template.html",
"path/to/template2.html" a = "An arg" b = "Another arg" %]
On Perl 5.6 on some platforms there may be some issues with
the variable localization. There is no problem on 5.8 and greater.
- "INSERT"
- Insert the contents of a file without template parsing.
Filenames must be relative to INCLUDE_PATH unless the ABSOLUTE
or RELATIVE configuration items are set.
Multiple filenames can be passed by separating them with a
plus, a space, or commas (TT2 doesn't support the comma).
[% INSERT "path/to/template.html",
"path/to/template2.html" %]
- "JS"
- Only available if the COMPILE_JS configuration item is true (default is
false). This requires the Template::Alloy::JS module to be installed.
Allow eval'ing the block of text as javascript. The block will
be parsed and then eval'ed.
[% a = "BimBam" %]
[%~ JS %]
write('The variable a was "' + get('a') + '"');
set('b', "FooBar");
[% END %]
[% b %]
Would print:
The variable a was "BimBam"
FooBar
- "LAST"
- Used to exit out of a WHILE or FOREACH loop.
- "LOOP"
- This directive operates similar to the HTML::Template loop directive. The
LOOP directive expects a single variable name. This variable name should
point to an arrayref of hashrefs. The keys of each hashref will be added
to the variable stash when it is iterated.
[% var a = [{b => 1}, {b => 2}, {b => 3}] %]
[% LOOP a %] ([% b %]) [% END %]
Would print:
(1) (2) (3)
If Alloy is in HT mode and GLOBAL_VARS is false, the contents
of the hashref will be the only items available during the loop
iteration.
If LOOP_CONTEXT_VARS is true, and
$QR_PRIVATE is false (default when called
through the output method), then the variables __first__, __last__,
__inner__, __odd__, and __counter__ will be set. See the HTML::Template
loop_context_vars configuration item for more information.
- "MACRO"
- Takes a directive and turns it into a variable that can take arguments.
[% MACRO foo(i, j) BLOCK %]You passed me [% i %] and [% j %].[% END %]
[%~ foo("a", "b") %]
[% foo(1, 2) %]
Would print:
You passed me a and b.
You passed me 1 and 2.
Another example:
[% MACRO bar(max) FOREACH i = [1 .. max] %]([% i %])[% END %]
[%~ bar(4) %]
Would print:
(1)(2)(3)(4)
Starting with version 1.012 of Template::Alloy there is also a
macro operator.
[% foo = ->(i,j){ "You passed me $i and $j" } %]
[% bar = ->(max){ FOREACH i = [1 .. max]; i ; END } %]
See the Template::Alloy::Operator documentation for more
examples.
- "META"
- Used to define variables that will be available via either the template or
component namespace.
Once defined, they cannot be overwritten.
[% template.foobar %]
[%~ META foobar = 'baz' %]
[%~ META foobar = 'bing' %]
Would print:
baz
- "NEXT"
- Used to go to the next iteration of a WHILE or FOREACH loop.
- "PERL"
- Only available if the EVAL_PERL configuration item is true (default is
false).
Allow eval'ing the block of text as perl. The block will be
parsed and then eval'ed.
[% a = "BimBam" %]
[%~ PERL %]
my $a = "[% a %]";
print "The variable \$a was \"$a\"";
$stash->set('b', "FooBar");
[% END %]
[% b %]
Would print:
The variable $a was "BimBam"
FooBar
During execution, anything printed to STDOUT will be inserted
into the template. Also, the $stash and
$context variables are set and are references to
objects that mimic the interface provided by Template::Context and
Template::Stash. These are provided for compatibility only.
$self contains the current Template::Alloy
object.
- "PROCESS"
- Parse the contents of a file or block and insert them. Unlike INCLUDE, no
variable localization happens so variables defined or modifications made
to existing variables remain after the template is processed.
[% PROCESS path/to/template.html %]
[% PROCESS "path/to/template.html" %]
[% file = "path/to/template.html" %]
[% PROCESS $file %]
[% BLOCK foo %]This is foo[% END %]
[% PROCESS foo %]
Arguments may also be passed to the template:
[% PROCESS "path/to/template.html" a = "An arg" b = "Another arg" %]
Filenames must be relative to INCLUDE_PATH unless the ABSOLUTE
or RELATIVE configuration items are set.
Multiple filenames can be passed by separating them with a
plus, a space, or commas (TT2 doesn't support the comma). Any supplied
arguments will be used on all templates.
[% PROCESS "path/to/template.html",
"path/to/template2.html" a = "An arg" b = "Another arg" %]
- "RAWPERL"
- Only available if the EVAL_PERL configuration item is true (default is
false). Similar to the PERL directive, but you will need to append to the
$output variable rather than just calling
PRINT.
- "RETURN"
- Used to exit the innermost block or template and continue processing in
the surrounding block or template.
There are two changes from TT2 behavior. First, In Alloy, a
RETURN during a MACRO call will only exit the MACRO. Second, the RETURN
directive takes an optional variable name or expression, if passed, the
MACRO will return this value instead of the normal text from the MACRO.
The process_simple method will also return this value.
You can also use the item, list, and hash return vmethods.
[% RETURN %] # just exits
[% RETURN "foo" %] # return value is foo
[% "foo".return %] # same thing
- "SET"
- Used to set variables.
[% SET a = 1 %][% a %] => "1"
[% a = 1 %][% a %] => "1"
[% b = 1 %][% SET a = b %][% a %] => "1"
[% a = 1 %][% SET a %][% a %] => ""
[% SET a = [1, 2, 3] %][% a.1 %] => "2"
[% SET a = {b => 'c'} %][% a.b %] => "c"
- "STOP"
- Used to exit the entire process method (out of all blocks and templates).
No content will be processed beyond this point.
- "SWITCH"
- Allow for SWITCH and CASE functionality.
[% a = "hi" %]
[% b = "bar" %]
[% SWITCH a %]
[% CASE "foo" %]a was foo
[% CASE b %]a was bar
[% CASE ["hi", "hello"] %]You said hi or hello
[% CASE DEFAULT %]I don't know what you said
[% END %]
Would print:
You said hi or hello
- "TAGS"
- Change the type of enclosing braces used to delineate template tags. This
remains in effect until the end of the enclosing block or template or
until the next TAGS directive. Either a named set of tags must be
supplied, or two tags themselves must be supplied.
[% TAGS html %]
[% TAGS <!-- --> %]
The named tags are (duplicated from TT):
asp => ['<%', '%>' ], # ASP
default => ['\[%', '%\]' ], # default
html => ['<!--', '-->' ], # HTML comments
mason => ['<%', '>' ], # HTML::Mason
metatext => ['%%', '%%' ], # Text::MetaText
php => ['<\?', '\?>' ], # PHP
star => ['\[\*', '\*\]' ], # TT alternate
template => ['\[%', '%\]' ], # Normal Template Toolkit
template1 => ['[\[%]%', '%[%\]]'], # allow TT1 style
tt2 => ['\[%', '%\]' ], # TT2
If custom tags are supplied, by default they are escaped using
quotemeta. You may also pass explicitly quoted strings, or regular
expressions as arguments as well (if your regex begins with a ', ",
or / you must quote it.
[% TAGS [<] [>] %] matches "[<] tag [>]"
[% TAGS '[<]' '[>]' %] matches "[<] tag [>]"
[% TAGS "[<]" "[>]" %] matches "[<] tag [>]"
[% TAGS /[<]/ /[>]/ %] matches "< tag >"
[% TAGS ** ** %] matches "** tag **"
[% TAGS /**/ /**/ %] Throws an exception.
You should be sure that the start tag does not include
grouping parens or INTERPOLATE will not function properly.
- "THROW"
- Allows for throwing an exception. If the exception is not caught via the
TRY DIRECTIVE, the template will abort processing of the directive.
[% THROW mytypes.sometime 'Something happened' arg1 => val1 %]
See the TRY directive for examples of usage.
- "TRY"
- The TRY block directive will catch exceptions that are thrown while
processing its block (It cannot catch parse errors unless they are in
included files or evaltt'ed strings. The TRY block will then look for a
CATCH block that will be processed. While it is being processed, the
"error" variable will be set with the thrown exception as the
value. After the TRY block - the FINAL block will be ran whether or not an
error was thrown (unless a CATCH block throws an error).
Note: Parse errors cannot be caught unless they are in an eval
FILTER, or are in a separate template being INCLUDEd or PROCESSed.
[% TRY %]
Nothing bad happened.
[% CATCH %]
Caught the error.
[% FINAL %]
This section runs no matter what happens.
[% END %]
Would print:
Nothing bad happened.
This section runs no matter what happens.
Another example:
[% TRY %]
[% THROW "Something happened" %]
[% CATCH %]
Error: [% error %]
Error.type: [% error.type %]
Error.info: [% error.info %]
[% FINAL %]
This section runs no matter what happens.
[% END %]
Would print:
Error: undef error - Something happened
Error.type: undef
Error.info: Something happened
This section runs no matter what happens.
You can give the error a type and more information including
named arguments. This information replaces the "info" property
of the exception.
[% TRY %]
[% THROW foo.bar "Something happened" "grrrr" foo => 'bar' %]
[% CATCH %]
Error: [% error %]
Error.type: [% error.type %]
Error.info: [% error.info %]
Error.info.0: [% error.info.0 %]
Error.info.1: [% error.info.1 %]
Error.info.args.0: [% error.info.args.0 %]
Error.info.foo: [% error.info.foo %]
[% END %]
Would print something like:
Error: foo.bar error - HASH(0x82a395c)
Error.type: foo.bar
Error.info: HASH(0x82a395c)
Error.info.0: Something happened
Error.info.1: grrrr
Error.info.args.0: Something happened
Error.info.foo: bar
You can also give the CATCH block a type to catch. And you can
nest TRY blocks. If types are specified, Alloy will try and find the
closest matching type. Also, an error object can be re-thrown using
$error as the argument to THROW.
[% TRY %]
[% TRY %]
[% THROW foo.bar "Something happened" %]
[% CATCH bar %]
Caught bar.
[% CATCH DEFAULT %]
Caught default - but re-threw.
[% THROW $error %]
[% END %]
[% CATCH foo %]
Caught foo.
[% CATCH foo.bar %]
Caught foo.bar.
[% CATCH %]
Caught anything else.
[% END %]
Would print:
Caught default - but re-threw.
Caught foo.bar.
- "UNLESS"
- Same as IF but condition is negated.
[% UNLESS 0 %]hi[% END %] => hi
Can also be a post operative directive.
- "USE"
- Allows for loading a Template::Toolkit style plugin.
[% USE iter = Iterator(['foo', 'bar']) %]
[%~ iter.get_first %]
[% iter.size %]
Would print:
foo
2
Note that it is possible to send arguments to the new object
constructor. It is also possible to omit the variable name being
assigned. In that case the name of the plugin becomes the variable.
[% USE Iterator(['foo', 'bar', 'baz']) %]
[%~ Iterator.get_first %]
[% Iterator.size %]
Would print:
foo
3
Plugins that are loaded are looked up for in the namespace
listed in the PLUGIN_BASE directive which defaults to Template::Plugin.
So in the previous example, if Template::Toolkit was installed, the iter
object would loaded by the class Template::Plugin::Iterator. In Alloy,
an effective way to disable plugins is to set the PLUGIN_BASE to a
non-existent base such as "_" (In TT it will still fall back
to look in Template::Plugin).
Note: The iterator plugin will fall back and use
Template::Alloy::Iterator if Template::Toolkit is not installed. No
other plugins come installed with Template::Alloy.
The names of the Plugin being loaded from PLUGIN_BASE are case
insensitive. However, using case insensitive names is bad as it requires
scanning the @INC directories for any module
matching the PLUGIN_BASE and caching the result (OK - not that bad).
If the plugin is not found and the LOAD_PERL directive is set,
then Alloy will try and load a module by that name (note: this type of
lookup is case sensitive and will not scan the
@INC dirs for a matching file).
# The LOAD_PERL directive should be set to 1
[% USE ta = Template::Alloy %]
[%~ ta.dump_parse_expr('2 * 3') %]
Would print:
[[undef, '*', 2, 3], 0];
See the PLUGIN_BASE, and PLUGINS configuration items.
See the documentation for Template::Manual::Plugins.
- "VIEW"
- Implement a TT style view. For more information, please see the
Template::View documentation. This DIRECTIVE will correctly parse the
arguments and then pass them along to a newly created Template::View
object. It will fail if Template::View can not be found.
- "WHILE"
- Will process a block of code while a condition is true.
[% WHILE i < 3 %]
[%~ i = i + 1 %]
i = [% i %]
[%~ END %]
Would print:
i = 1
i = 2
i = 3
You could also do:
[% i = 4 %]
[% WHILE (i = i - 1) %]
i = [% i %]
[%~ END %]
Would print:
i = 3
i = 2
i = 1
Note that (f = f - 1) is a valid expression that returns the
value of the assignment. The parenthesis are not optional.
WHILE has a built in limit of 1000 iterations. This is
controlled by the global variable $WHILE_MAX in
Template::Alloy.
WHILE may also be used as a post operative directive.
[% "$i" WHILE (i = i + 1) < 7 %] => 123456
- "WRAPPER"
- Block directive. Processes contents of its block and then passes them in
the [% content %] variable to the block or filename listed in the WRAPPER
tag.
[% WRAPPER foo b = 23 %]
My content to be processed ([% b %]).[% a = 2 %]
[% END %]
[% BLOCK foo %]
A header ([% a %]).
[% content %]
A footer ([% a %]).
[% END %]
This would print.
A header (2).
My content to be processed (23).
A footer (2).
The WRAPPER directive may also be used as a post operative
directive.
[% BLOCK baz %]([% content %])[% END -%]
[% "foobar" WRAPPER baz %]
Would print
(foobar)');
Multiple filenames can be passed by separating them with a
plus, a space, or commas (TT2 doesn't support the comma). Any supplied
arguments will be used on all templates. Wrappers are processed in
reverse order, so that the first wrapper listed will surround each
subsequent wrapper listed. Variables from inner wrappers are available
to the next wrapper that surrounds it.
[% WRAPPER "path/to/outer.html",
"path/to/inner.html" a = "An arg" b = "Another arg" %]
HTML::Template templates use directives that look similar to the following:
<TMPL_VAR NAME="foo">
<TMPL_IF NAME="bar">
BAR
</TMPL_IF>
The normal set of HTML::Template directives are TMPL_VAR, TMPL_IF,
TMPL_ELSE, TMPL_UNLESS, TMPL_INCLUDE, and TMPL_LOOP. These tags should have
either a NAME attribute, an EXPR attribute, or a bare variable name that is
used to specify the value to be operated. If a NAME is specified, it may
only be a single level value (as opposed to a TT chained variable). In the
case of the TMPL_INCLUDE directive, the NAME is the file to be included.
In Alloy, the EXPR attribute can be used with any of these types
to specify TT compatible variable or expression that will be used for the
value.
<TMPL_VAR NAME="foo"> Prints the value contained in foo
<TMPL_VAR foo> Prints the value contained in foo
<TMPL_VAR EXPR="foo"> Prints the value contained in foo
<TMPL_VAR NAME="foo.bar.baz"> Prints the value contained in {'foo.bar.baz'}
<TMPL_VAR EXPR="foo.bar.baz"> Prints the value contained in {foo}->{bar}->{baz}
<TMPL_IF foo> Prints FOO if foo is true
FOO
</TMPL_IF
<TMPL_UNLESS foo> Prints FOO unless foo is true
FOO
</TMPL_UNLESS
<TMPL_INCLUDE NAME="foo.ht"> Includes the template in "foo.ht"
<TMPL_LOOP foo> Iterates on the arrayref foo
<TMPL_VAR name>
</TMPL_LOOP>
Template::Alloy makes all of the other TT3 directives available in
addition to the normal set of HTML::Template directives. For example, the
following is valid in Alloy.
<TMPL_MACRO bar(n) BLOCK>You said <TMPL_VAR n></TMPL_MACRO>
<TMPL_GET bar("hello")>
The TMPL_VAR tag may also include an optional ESCAPE attribute.
This specifies how the value of the tag should be escaped prior to
substituting into the template.
Escape value | Type of escape
---------------------------------
HTML, 1 | HTML encoding
URL | URL encoding
JS | basic javascript encoding (\n, \r, and \")
NONE, 0 | No encoding (default).
The TMPL_VAR tag may also include an optional DEFAULT attribute
that contains a string that will be used if the variable returns false.
<TMPL_VAR foo DEFAULT="Foo was false">
Chomping refers to the handling of whitespace immediately before and immediately
after template tags. By default, nothing happens to this whitespace. Modifiers
can be placed just inside the opening and just before the closing tags to
control this behavior.
Additionally, the PRE_CHOMP and POST_CHOMP configuration variables
can be set and will globally control all chomping behavior for tags that do
not have their own chomp modifier. PRE_CHOMP and POST_CHOMP can be set to
any of the following values:
none: 0 + Template::Constants::CHOMP_NONE
one: 1 - Template::Constants::CHOMP_ONE
collapse: 2 = Template::Constants::CHOMP_COLLAPSE
greedy: 3 ~ Template::Constants::CHOMP_GREEDY
- CHOMP_NONE
- Don't do any chomping. The "+" sign is used to indicate
CHOMP_NONE.
Hello.
[%+ "Hi." +%]
Howdy.
Would print:
Hello.
Hi.
Howdy.
- CHOMP_ONE (formerly known as CHOMP_ALL)
- Delete any whitespace up to the adjacent newline. The "-" is
used to indicate CHOMP_ONE.
Hello.
[%- "Hi." -%]
Howdy.
Would print:
Hello.
Hi.
Howdy.
- CHOMP_COLLAPSE
- Collapse adjacent whitespace to a single space. The "=" is used
to indicate CHOMP_COLLAPSE.
Hello.
[%= "Hi." =%]
Howdy.
Would print:
Hello. Hi. Howdy.
- CHOMP_GREEDY
- Remove all adjacent whitespace. The "~" is used to indicate
CHOMP_GREEDY.
Hello.
[%~ "Hi." ~%]
Howdy.
Would print:
Hello.Hi.Howdy.
The following configuration variables are supported (in alphabetical order).
Note: for further discussion you can refer to the TT config documentation.
Items may be passed in upper or lower case. If lower case names
are passed they will be resolved to uppercase during the "new"
method.
All of the variables in this section can be passed to the
"new" constructor.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(
VARIABLES => \%hash_of_variables,
AUTO_RESET => 0,
TRIM => 1,
POST_CHOMP => "=",
PRE_CHOMP => "-",
);
- ABSOLUTE
- Boolean. Default false. Are absolute paths allowed for included
files.
- ADD_LOCAL_PATH
- If true, allows calls include_filename to temporarily add the directory of
the current template being processed to the INCLUDE_PATHS arrayref. This
allows templates to refer to files in the local template directory without
specifying the local directory as part of the filename. Default is 0. If
set to a negative value, the current directory will be added to the end of
the current INCLUDE_PATHS.
This property may also be set in the template using the CONFIG
directive.
[% CONFIG ADD_LOCAL_PATH => 1 %]
- ANYCASE
- Allow directive matching to be case insensitive.
[% get 23 %] prints 23 with ANYCASE => 1
- AUTO_RESET
- Boolean. Default 1. Clear blocks that were set during the process
method.
- AUTO_EVAL
- Boolean. Default 0 (default 1 in Velocity syntax). If set to true, double
quoted strings will automatically be passed to the eval filter. This
configuration option may also be passed to the CONFIG directive.
- AUTO_FILTER
- Can be the name of any filter. Default undef. Any variable returned by a
GET directive (including implicit GET) will be passed to the named filter.
This configuration option may also be passed to the CONFIG directive.
# with AUTO_FILTER => 'html'
[% f = "&"; GET f %] prints &
[% f = "&"; f %] prints & (implicit GET)
If a variable already has another filter applied the
AUTO_FILTER is not applied. The "none" scalar virtual method
has been added to allow for using variables without reapplying
filters.
# with AUTO_FILTER => 'html'
[% f = "&"; f | none %] prints &
[% f = "&"; g = f; g %] prints &
[% f = "&"; g = f; g | none %] prints & (because g = f is a SET directive)
[% f = "&"; g = GET f; g | none %] prints & (because the actual GET directive was called)
- BLOCKS
- Only available via when using the process interface.
A hashref of blocks that can be used by the process
method.
BLOCKS => {
block_1 => sub { ... }, # coderef that returns a block
block_2 => 'A String', # simple string
},
Note that a Template::Document cannot be supplied as a value
(TT supports this). However, it is possible to supply a value that is
equal to the hashref returned by the load_template method.
- CACHE_SIZE
- Number of compiled templates to keep in memory. Default undef. Undefined
means to allow all templates to cache. A value of 0 will force no caching.
The cache mechanism will clear templates that have not been used
recently.
- CACHE_STR_REFS
- Default 1. If set, any string refs will have an MD5 sum taken that will
then be used for caching the document - both in memory and on the file
system (if configured). This will give a significant speed boost. Note
that this affects strings passed to the EVALUATE directive or eval filters
as well. It may be set using the CONFIG directive.
- CALL_CONTEXT (Not in TT)
- Can be one of 'item', 'list', or 'smart'. The default type is 'smart'. The
CALL_CONTEXT configuration specifies in what Perl context coderefs and
methods used in the processed templates will be called. TT historically
has avoided the distinction of item (scalar) vs list context. To avoid
worrying about this, TT introduced 'smart' context. The
"@()" and
"$()" context specifiers make it easier
to use CALL_CONTEXT in some situations.
The following table shows the relationship between the various
contexts:
return values smart context list context item context
------------- ------------- ------------ ------------
A 'foo' 'foo' ['foo'] 'foo'
B undef undef [undef] undef
C (no return value) undef [] undef
D (7) 7 [7] 7
E (7,8,9) [7,8,9] [7,8,9] 9
F @a = (7) 7 [7] 1
G @a = (7,8,9) [7,8,9] [7,8,9] 3
H ({b=>"c"}) {b=>"c"} [{b=>"c"}] {b=>"c"}
I ([1]) [1] [[1]] [1]
J ([1],[2]) [[1],[2]] [[1],[2]] [2]
K [7,8,9] [7,8,9] [[7,8,9]] [7,8,9]
L (undef, "foo") die "foo" [undef, "foo"] "foo"
M wantarray?1:0 1 [1] 0
Cases F, H, I and M are common sticking points of the smart
context in TT2. Note that list context always returns an arrayref from a
method or function call. Smart context can give confusing results
sometimes, especially the I and J cases. Case L for smart match is very
surprising.
The list and item context provide another feature for method
calls. In smart context, TT will look for a hash key in the object by
the same name as the method, if a method by that name doesn't exist. In
item and list context Alloy will die if a method by that name cannot be
found.
The CALL_CONTEXT configuration item can be passed to new or it
may also be set during runtime using the CONFIG directive. The following
method call would be in list context:
[% CONFIG CALL_CONTEXT => 'list';
results = my_obj.get_results;
CONFIG CALL_CONTEXT => 'smart'
%]
Note that we needed to restore CALL_CONTEXT to the default
'smart' value. Template::Alloy has added the
"@()" (list) and the
"$()" (item) context specifiers. The
previous example could be written as:
[% results = @( my_obj.get_results ) %]
To call that same method in item (scalar) context you would do
the following:
[% results = $( my_obj.get_results ) %]
The "@()" and
"$()" operators are based on the Perl
6 counterpart.
- COMPILE_DIR
- Base directory to store compiled templates. Default undef. Compiled
templates will only be stored if one of COMPILE_DIR and COMPILE_EXT is
set.
If set, the AST of parsed documents will be cached. If
COMPILE_PERL is set, the compiled perl code will also be stored.
- COMPILE_EXT
- Extension to add to stored compiled template filenames. Default undef.
If set, the AST of parsed documents will be cached. If
COMPILE_PERL is set, the compiled perl code will also be stored.
- COMPILE_JS
- Default false.
Requires installation of Template::Alloy::JS. When enabled,
the parsed templates will be translated into Javascript and executed
using the V8 javascript engine. If compile_dir is also set, this
compiled javascript will be cached to disk.
If your templates are short, there is little benefit to using
this other than you can then use the JS directive. If your templates are
long or you are running in a cached environment, this will speed up your
templates.
Certain limitations exist when COMPILE_JS is set, most notably
the USE and VIEW directives are not supported, and method calls on
objects passed to the template do not work (code refs passed in do work
however). These limitations are due to the nature of JavaScript::V8 bind
and Perl/JavaScript OO differences.
- COMPILE_PERL
- Default false.
If set to 1 or 2, will translate the normal AST into a perl 5
code document. This document can then be executed directly, cached in
memory, or cached on the file system depending upon the configuration
items set.
If set to 1, a perl code document will always be
generated.
If set to 2, a perl code document will only be generated if an
AST has already been cached for the document. This should give a speed
benefit and avoid extra compilation unless the document has been used
more than once.
If Alloy is running in a cached environment such as mod_perl,
then using compile_perl can offer some speed benefit and makes Alloy
faster than Text::Tmpl and as fast as HTML::Template::Compiled (but
Alloy has more features).
If you are not running in a cached environment, such as from
commandline, or from CGI, it is generally faster to only run from the
AST (with COMPILE_PERL => 0).
- CONSTANTS
- Hashref. Used to define variables that will be "folded" into the
compiled template. Variables defined here cannot be overridden.
CONSTANTS => {my_constant => 42},
A template containing:
[% constants.my_constant %]
Will have the value 42 compiled in.
Constants defined in this way can be chained as in [%
constant.foo.bar.baz %].
- CONSTANT_NAMESPACE
- Allow for setting the top level of values passed in CONSTANTS. Default
value is 'constants'.
- DEBUG
- Takes a list of constants |'ed together which enables different debugging
modes. Alternately the lowercase names may be used (multiple values joined
by a ",").
The only supported TT values are:
DEBUG_UNDEF (2) - debug when an undefined value is used (now easier to use STRICT)
DEBUG_DIRS (8) - debug when a directive is used.
DEBUG_ALL (2047) - turn on all debugging.
Either of the following would turn on undef and directive debugging:
DEBUG => 'undef, dirs', # preferred
DEBUG => 2 | 8,
DEBUG => DEBUG_UNDEF | DEBUG_DIRS, # constants from Template::Constants
- DEBUG_FORMAT
- Change the format of messages inserted when DEBUG has DEBUG_DIRS set on.
This essentially the same thing as setting the format using the DEBUG
directive.
- DEFAULT
- The name of a default template file to use if the passed one is not
found.
- DELIMITER
- String to use to split INCLUDE_PATH with. Default is :. It is more
straight forward to just send INCLUDE_PATH an arrayref of paths.
- DUMP
- Configures the behavior of the DUMP tag. May be set to 0, a hashref, or
another true value. Default is true.
If set to 0, all DUMP directives will do nothing. This is
useful if you would like to turn off the DUMP directives under some
environments.
IF set to a true value (or undefined) then DUMP directives
will operate.
If set to a hashref, the values of the hash can be used to
configure the operation of the DUMP directives. The following are the
values that can be set in this hash.
- EntireStash
- Default 1. If set to 0, then the DUMP directive will not print the entire
contents of the stash when a DUMP directive is called without
arguments.
- handler
- Defaults to an internal coderef. If set to a coderef, the DUMP directive
will pass the arguments to be dumped and expects a string with the dumped
data. This gives complete control over the dump process.
Note 1: The default handler makes sure that values matching
the private variable regex are not included. If you install your own
handler, you will need to take care of these variables if you intend for
them to not be shown.
Note 2: If you would like the name of the variable to be
dumped, include the string '$VAR1' and the DUMP directive will
interpolate the value. For example, to dump all output as YAML - you
could do the following:
DUMP => {
handler => sub {
require YAML;
return "\$VAR1 =\n".YAML::Dump(shift);
},
}
- header
- Default 1. Controls whether a header is printed for each DUMP directive.
The header contains the file and line number the DUMP directive was called
from. If set to 0 the headers are disabled.
- html
- Defaults to 1 if $ENV{'REQUEST_METHOD'} is set - 0
otherwise. If set to 1, then the output of the DUMP directive is passed to
the html filter and encased in "pre" tags. If set to 0 no html
encoding takes place.
- Sortkeys, Useqq, Ident, Pad, etc
- Any of the Data::Dumper configuration items may be passed.
- ENCODING
- Default undef. If set, and if Perl version is greater than or equal to
5.7.3 (when Encode.pm was first included), then Encode::decode will be
called every time a template file is processed and will be passed the
value of ENCODING and text from the template.
This item can also be set using [% CONFIG ENCODING =>
encoding %] before calling INCLUDE or PROCESS directives to change
encodings on the fly.
- END_TAG
- Set a string to use as the closing delimiter for TT. Default is
"%]".
- ERROR
- Used as a fall back when the processing of a template fails. May either be
a single filename that will be used in all cases, or may be a hashref of
options where the keynames represent error types that will be handled by
the filename in their value. A key named default will be used if no other
matching keyname can be found. The selection process is similar to that of
the TRY/CATCH/THROW directives (see those directives for more
information).
my $t = Template::Alloy->new({
ERROR => 'general/catch_all_errors.html',
});
my $t = Template::Alloy->new({
ERROR => {
default => 'general/catch_all_errors.html',
foo => 'catch_all_general_foo_errors.html',
'foo.bar' => 'catch_foo_bar_errors.html',
},
});
Note that the ERROR handler will only be used for errors
during the processing of the main document. It will not catch errors
that occur in templates found in the PRE_PROCESS, POST_PROCESS, and
WRAPPER configuration items.
- ERRORS
- Same as the ERROR configuration item. Both may be used
interchangeably.
- EVAL_PERL
- Boolean. Default false. If set to a true value, PERL and RAWPERL blocks
will be allowed to run. This is a potential security hole, as arbitrary
perl can be included in the template. If Template::Toolkit is installed, a
true EVAL_PERL value also allows the perl and evalperl filters to be
used.
- FILTERS
- Allow for passing in TT style filters.
my $filters = {
filter1 => sub { my $str = shift; $s =~ s/./1/gs; $s },
filter2 => [sub { my $str = shift; $s =~ s/./2/gs; $s }, 0],
filter3 => [sub { my ($context, @args) = @_; return sub { my $s = shift; $s =~ s/./3/gs; $s } }, 1],
};
my $str = q{
[% a = "Hello" %]
1 ([% a | filter1 %])
2 ([% a | filter2 %])
3 ([% a | filter3 %])
};
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(FILTERS => $filters);
$obj->process(\$str) || die $obj->error;
Would print:
1 (11111)
2 (22222)
3 (33333)
Filters passed in as an arrayref should contain a coderef and
a value indicating if they are dynamic or static (true meaning dynamic).
The dynamic filters are passed the pseudo context object and any
arguments and should return a coderef that will be called as the filter.
The filter coderef is then passed the string.
- GLOBAL_CACHE
- Default 0. If true, documents will be cached in
$Template::Alloy::GLOBAL_CACHE. It may also be
passed a hashref, in which case the documents will be cached in the passed
hashref.
The TT, Tmpl, and velocity will automatically cache documents
in the object. The HTML::Template interface uses a new object each time.
Setting the HTML::Template's CACHE configuration is the same as setting
GLOBAL_CACHE.
- INCLUDE_PATH
- A string or an arrayref or coderef that returns an arrayref that contains
directories to look for files included by processed templates. Defaults to
"." (the current directory).
- INCLUDE_PATHS
- Non-TT item. Same as INCLUDE_PATH but only takes an arrayref. If not
specified then INCLUDE_PATH is turned into an arrayref and stored in
INCLUDE_PATHS. Overrides INCLUDE_PATH.
- INTERPOLATE
- Boolean. Specifies whether variables in text portions of the template will
be interpolated. For example, the $variable and
${var.value} would be substituted with the appropriate values from the
variable cache (if INTERPOLATE is on).
[% IF 1 %]The variable $variable had a value ${var.value}[% END %]
- LOAD_PERL
- Indicates if the USE directive can fall back and try and load a perl
module if the indicated module was not found in the PLUGIN_BASE path. See
the USE directive. This configuration has no bearing on the COMPILE_PERL
directive used to indicate using compiled perl documents.
- MAX_EVAL_RECURSE (Alloy only)
- Will use $Template::Alloy::MAX_EVAL_RECURSE if not
present. Default is 50. Prevents runaway on the following:
[% f = "[% f|eval %]" %][% f|eval %]
- MAX_MACRO_RECURSE (Alloy only)
- Will use $Template::Alloy::MAX_MACRO_RECURSE if
not present. Default is 50. Prevents runaway on the following:
[% MACRO f BLOCK %][% f %][% END %][% f %]
- NAMESPACE
- No Template::Namespace::Constants support. Hashref of hashrefs
representing constants that will be folded into the template at compile
time.
Template::Alloy->new(NAMESPACE => {constants => {
foo => 'bar',
}});
Is the same as
Template::Alloy->new(CONSTANTS => {
foo => 'bar',
});
Any number of hashes can be added to the NAMESPACE hash.
- NEGATIVE_STAT_TTL (Not in TT)
- Defaults to STAT_TTL which defaults to $STAT_TTL
which defaults to 1.
Similar to STAT_TTL - but represents the time-to-live seconds
until a document that was not found is checked again against the system
for modifications. Setting this number higher will allow for fewer file
system accesses. Setting it to a negative number will allow for the file
system to be checked every hit.
- NO_INCLUDES
- Default false. If true, calls to INCLUDE, PROCESS, WRAPPER and INSERT will
fail. This option is also available when using the process method.
- OUTPUT
- Alternate way of passing in the output location for processed templates.
If process is not passed an output argument, it will look for this value.
See the process method for a listing of possible values.
- OUTPUT_PATH
- Base path for files written out via the process method or via the redirect
and file filters. See the redirect virtual method and the process method
for more information.
- PLUGINS
- A hashref of mappings of plugin modules.
PLUGINS => {
Iterator => 'Template::Plugin::Iterator',
DBI => 'MyDBI',
},
See the USE directive for more information.
- PLUGIN_BASE
- Default value is Template::Plugin. The base module namespace that template
plugins will be looked for. See the USE directive for more information.
May be either a single namespace, or an arrayref of namespaces.
- POST_CHOMP
- Set the type of chomping at the ending of a tag. See the section on
chomping for more information.
- POST_PROCESS
- Only available via when using the process interface.
A list of templates to be processed and appended to the
content after the main template. During this processing the
"template" namespace will contain the name of the main file
being processed.
This is useful for adding a global footer to all
templates.
- PRE_CHOMP
- Set the type of chomping at the beginning of a tag. See the section on
chomping for more information.
- PRE_DEFINE
- Same as the VARIABLES configuration item.
- PRE_PROCESS
- Only available via when using the process interface.
A list of templates to be processed before and pre-pended to
the content before the main template. During this processing the
"template" namespace will contain the name of the main file
being processed.
This is useful for adding a global header to all
templates.
- PROCESS
- Only available via when using the process interface.
Specify a file to use as the template rather than the one
passed in to the ->process method.
- RECURSION
- Boolean. Default false. Indicates that INCLUDED or PROCESSED files can
refer to each other in a circular manner. Be careful about recursion.
- RELATIVE
- Boolean. Default false. If true, allows filenames to be specified that are
relative to the currently running process.
- SEMICOLONS
- Boolean. Default false. If true, then the syntax will require that
semi-colons separate multiple directives in the same tag. This is useful
for keeping the syntax a little more clean as well as trouble shooting
some errors.
- SHOW_UNDEFINED_INTERP (Not in TT)
- Default false (default true in Velocity). If INTERPOLATE is true,
interpolated dollar variables that return undef will be removed. With
SHOW_UNDEFINED_INTERP set, undef values will leave the variable there.
[% CONFIG INTERPOLATE => 1 %]
[% SET foo = 1 %][% SET bar %]
($foo)($bar) ($!foo)($!bar)
Would print:
(1)() (1)()
But the following:
[% CONFIG INTERPOLATE => 1, SHOW_UNDEFINED_INTERP => 1 %]
[% SET foo = 1 %][% SET bar %]
($foo)($bar) ($!foo)($!bar)
Would print:
(1)($bar) (1)()
Note that you can use an exclamation point directly after the
dollar to make the variable silent. This is similar to how Velocity
works.
- START_TAG
- Set a string or regular expression to use as the opening delimiter for TT.
Default is "[%". You should be sure that the tag does not
include grouping parens or INTERPOLATE will not function properly.
- STASH
- Template::Alloy manages its own stash of variables. You can pass a
Template::Stash or Template::Stash::XS object, but Template::Alloy will
copy all of values out of the object into its own stash. Template::Alloy
won't use any of the methods of the passed STASH object. The STASH option
is only available when using the process method.
- STAT_TTL
- Defaults to $STAT_TTL which defaults to 1.
Represents time-to-live seconds until a cached in memory document is
compared to the file system for modifications. Setting this number higher
will allow for fewer file system accesses. Setting it to a negative number
will allow for the file system to be checked every hit.
- STREAM
- Defaults to false. If set to true, generated template content will be
printed to the currently selected filehandle (default is STDOUT) as soon
as it is ready - there will be no buffering of the output.
The Stream role uses the Play role's directives
(non-compiled_perl).
All directives and configuration work, except for the
following exceptions:
- CLEAR directive
- Because the output is not buffered - the CLEAR directive would have no
effect. The CLEAR directive will throw an error when STREAM is on.
- TRIM configuration
- Because the output is not buffered - trim operations cannot be played on
the output buffers.
- WRAPPER configuration/directive
- The WRAPPER configuration and directive items effectively turn off STREAM
since the WRAPPERS are generated in reverse order and because the content
is inserted into the middle of the WRAPPERS. WRAPPERS will still work,
they just won't stream.
- VARIOUS errors
- Because the template is streaming, items that cause errors my result in
partially printed pages - since the error would occur part way through the
print.
All output is printed directly to the currently selected
filehandle (defaults to STDOUT) via the CORE::print function. Any output
parameter passed to process or process_simple will be ignored.
If you would like the output to go to another handle, you will
need to select that handle, process the template, and re-select STDOUT.
- STRICT
- Defaults to false. If set to true, any undefined variable that is
encountered will cause the processing of the template to abort. This can
be caught with a TRY block. This can be useful for making sure that the
template only attempts to use variables that were correctly initialized
similar in spirit to Perl's "use strict."
When this occurs the strict_throw method is called.
See the STRICT_THROW configuration for additional options.
Similar functionality could be implemented using
UNDEFINED_ANY.
The STRICT configuration item can be passed to new or it may
also be set during runtime using the CONFIG directive. Once set though
it cannot be disabled for the duration of the current template and sub
components. For example you could call [% CONFIG STRICT => 1 %] in
header.tt and strict mode would be enabled for the header.tt and any sub
templates processed by header.tt.
- STRICT_THROW (not in TT)
- Default undef. Can be set to a subroutine which will be called when STRICT
is set and an undefined variable is processed. It will be passed the error
type, error message, and a hashref of template information containing the
current component being processed, the current outer template being
processed, the identity reference for the variable, and the stringified
name of the identity. This override can be used for filtering allowable
elements.
my $ta = Template::Alloy->new({
STRICT => 1,
STRICT_THROW => sub {
my ($ta, $err_type, $msg, $args) = @_;
return if $args->{'component'} eq 'header.tt'
&& $args->{'template'} eq 'main.html'
&& $args->{'name'} eq 'foo.bar(1)'; # stringified identity name
$ta->throw($err_type, $msg); # all other undefined variables die
},
});
- SYNTAX (not in TT)
- Defaults to "cet". Indicates the syntax that will be used for
parsing included templates or eval'ed strings. You can use the CONFIG
directive to change the SYNTAX on the fly (it will not affect the syntax
of the document currently being parsed).
The syntax may be passed in upper or lower case.
The available choices are:
alloy - Template::Alloy style - the same as TT3
tt3 - Template::Toolkit ver3 - same as Alloy
tt2 - Template::Toolkit ver2 - almost the same as TT3
tt1 - Template::Toolkit ver1 - almost the same as TT2
ht - HTML::Template - same as HTML::Template::Expr without EXPR
hte - HTML::Template::Expr
js - JavaScript style - requires compile_js to be set.
jsr - JavaScript Raw style - requires compile_js to be set.
Passing in a different syntax allows for the process method to
use a non-TT syntax and for the output method to use a non-HT
syntax.
The following is a sample of HTML::Template interface usage
parsing a Template::Toolkit style document.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(filename => 'my/template.tt'
syntax => 'cet');
$obj->param(\%swap);
print $obj->output;
The following is a sample of Template::Toolkit interface usage
parsing a HTML::Template::Expr style document.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(SYNTAX => 'hte');
$obj->process('my/template.ht', \%swap);
You can use the define_syntax method to add another custom
syntax to the list of available options.
- TAG_STYLE
- Allow for setting the type of tag delimiters to use for parsing the TT.
See the TAGS directive for a listing of the available types.
- TRIM
- Remove leading and trailing whitespace from blocks and templates. This
operation is performed after all enclosed template tags have been
executed.
- UNDEFINED_ANY
- This is not a TT configuration option. This option expects to be a code
ref that will be called if a variable is undefined during a call to
play_expr. It is passed the variable identity array as a single argument.
This is most similar to the "undefined" method of
Template::Stash. It allows for the "auto-defining" of a variable
for use in the template. It is suggested that UNDEFINED_GET be used
instead as UNDEFINED_ANY is a little to general in defining variables.
You can also sub class the module and override the
undefined_any method.
- UNDEFINED_GET
- This is not a TT configuration option. This option expects to be a code
ref that will be called if a variable is undefined during a call to GET.
It is passed the variable identity array as a single argument. This is
more useful than UNDEFINED_ANY in that it is only called during a GET
directive rather than in embedded expressions (such as [% a || b || c %]).
You can also sub class the module and override the
undefined_get method.
- V1DOLLAR
- This allows for some compatibility with TT1 templates. The only real
behavior change is that [% $foo %] becomes the
same as [% foo %]. The following is a basic table of changes invoked by
using V1DOLLAR.
With V1DOLLAR Equivalent Without V1DOLLAR (Normal default)
"[% foo %]" "[% foo %]"
"[% $foo %]" "[% foo %]"
"[% ${foo} %]" "[% ${foo} %]"
"[% foo.$bar %]" "[% foo.bar %]"
"[% ${foo.bar} %]" "[% ${foo.bar} %]"
"[% ${foo.$bar} %]" "[% ${foo.bar} %]"
"Text: $foo" "Text: $foo"
"Text: ${foo}" "Text: ${foo}"
"Text: ${$foo}" "Text: ${foo}"
- V2EQUALS
- Default 1 in the TT syntax, defaults to 0 in the HTML::Template syntax.
If set to 1 then "==" is an alias for "eq"
and "!= is an alias for "ne".
[% CONFIG V2EQUALS => 1 %][% ('7' == '7.0') || 0 %]
[% CONFIG V2EQUALS => 0 %][% ('7' == '7.0') || 0 %]
Prints
0
1
- V2PIPE
- Restores the behavior of the pipe operator to be compatible with TT2.
With V2PIPE = 1
[%- BLOCK a %]b is [% b %]
[% END %]
[%- PROCESS a b => 237 | repeat(2) %]
# output of block "a" with b set to 237 is passed to the repeat(2) filter
b is 237
b is 237
With V2PIPE = 0 (default)
[%- BLOCK a %]b is [% b %]
[% END %]
[% PROCESS a b => 237 | repeat(2) %]
# b set to 237 repeated twice, and b passed to block "a"
b is 237237
- VARIABLES
- A hashref of variables to initialize the template stash with. These
variables are available for use in any of the executed templates. See the
section on VARIABLES for the types of information that can be passed
in.
- VMETHOD_FUNCTIONS
- Defaults to 1. All scalar virtual methods are available as top level
functions as well. This is not true of TT2. In Template::Alloy the
following are equivalent:
[% "abc".length %]
[% length("abc") %]
You may set VMETHOD_FUNCTIONS to 0 to disable this
behavior.
- WRAPPER
- Only available via when using the process interface.
Operates similar to the WRAPPER directive. The option can be
given a single filename, or an arrayref of filenames that will be used
to wrap the processed content. If an arrayref is passed the filenames
are processed in reverse order, so that the first filename specified
will end up being on the outside (surrounding all other wrappers).
my $t = Template::Alloy->new(
WRAPPER => ['my/wrappers/outer.html', 'my/wrappers/inner.html'],
);
Content generated by the PRE_PROCESS and POST_PROCESS will
come before and after (respectively) the content generated by the
WRAPPER configuration item.
See the WRAPPER directive for more examples of how wrappers
are constructed.
The following HTML::Template and HTML::Template::Expr configuration variables
are supported (in HTML::Template documentation order). Note: for further
discussion you can refer to the HT documentation. Many of the variables
mentioned in the TT CONFIGURATION section apply here as well. Unless noted,
these items only apply when using the output method.
Items may be passed in upper or lower case. All passed items are
resolved to upper case.
These variables should be passed to the "new"
constructor.
my $obj = Template::Alloy->new(
type => 'filename',
source => 'my/template.ht',
die_on_bad_params => 1,
loop_context_vars => 1,
global_vars => 1
post_chomp => "=",
pre_chomp => "-",
);
- TYPE
- Can be one of filename, filehandle, arrayref, or scalarref. Indicates what
type of input is in the "source" configuration item.
- SOURCE
- Stores where to read the input file. The type is specified in the
"type" configuration item.
- FILENAME
- Indicates a filename to read the template from. Same as putting the
filename in the "source" item and setting "type" to
"filename".
Must be set to enable caching.
- FILEHANDLE
- Should contain an open filehandle to read the template from. Same as
putting the filehandle in the "source" item and setting
"type" to "filehandle".
Will not be cached.
- ARRAYREF
- Should contain an arrayref whose values are the lines of the template.
Same as putting the arrayref in the "source" item and setting
"type" to "arrayref".
Will not be cached.
- SCALARREF
- Should contain an reference to a scalar that contains the template. Same
as putting the scalar ref in the "source" item and setting
"type" to "scalarref".
Will not be cached.
- CACHE
- If set to one, then Alloy will use a global, in-memory document cache to
store compiled templates in between calls. This is generally only useful
in a mod_perl environment. The document is checked for a different
modification time at each request.
- BLIND_CACHE
- Same as with cache enabled, but will not check if the document has been
modified.
- FILE_CACHE
- If set to 1, will cache the compiled document on the file system. If true,
file_cache_dir must be set.
- FILE_CACHE_DIR
- The directory where to store cached documents when file_cache is true.
This is similar to the TT compile_dir option.
- DOUBLE_FILE_CACHE
- Uses a combination of file_cache and cache.
- PATH
- Same as INCLUDE_PATH when using the process method.
- ASSOCIATE
- May be a single CGI object or an arrayref of objects. The params from
these objects will be added to the params during the output call.
- CASE_SENSITIVE
- Allow passed variables set through the param method, or the associate
configuration to be used case sensitively. Default is off. It is highly
suggested that this be set to 1.
- LOOP_CONTEXT_VARS
- Default false. When true, calls to the loop directive will create the
following variables that give information about the current iteration of
the loop:
__first__ - True on first iteration only
__last__ - True on last iteration only
__inner__ - True on any iteration that isn't first or last
__odd__ - True on odd iterations
__counter__ - The iteration count
These variables are also available to LOOPs run under TT
syntax if loop_context_vars is set and if QR_PRIVATE is set to 0.
- GLOBAL_VARS.
- Default true in HTE mode. Default false in HT. Allows top level variables
to be used in LOOPs. When false, only variables defined in the current
LOOP iteration hashref will be available.
- DEFAULT_ESCAPE
- Controls the type of escape used on named variables in TMPL_VAR
directives. Can be one of HTML, URL, or JS. The values of TMPL_VAR
directives will be encoded with this type unless they specify their own
type via an ESCAPE attribute.
You may alternately use the AUTO_FILTER directive which can be
any of the item vmethod filters (you must use lower case when specifying
the AUTO_FILTER directive). The AUTO_FILTER directive will also be
applied to TMPL_VAR EXPR and TMPL_GET items while DEFAULT_ESCAPE only
applies to TMPL_VAR NAME items.
- NO_TT
- Default false in 'hte' syntax. Default true in 'ht' syntax. If true, no
extended TT directives will be allowed.
The output method uses 'hte' syntax by default.
The following list of methods are other interesting methods of Alloy that may be
re-implemented by subclasses of Alloy.
- "exception"
- Creates an exception object blessed into the package listed in
Template::Alloy::Exception.
- "execute_tree"
- Executes a parsed tree (returned from parse_tree)
- "play_expr"
- Play the parsed expression. Turns a variable identity array into the
parsed variable. This method is also responsible for playing operators and
running virtual methods and filters. The variable identity array may also
contain literal values, or operator identity arrays.
- "include_filename"
- Takes a file path, and resolves it into the full filename using paths from
INCLUDE_PATH or INCLUDE_PATHS.
- "_insert"
- Resolves the file passed, and then returns its contents.
- "list_filters"
- Dynamically loads the filters list from Template::Filters when a filter is
used that does not have a native implementation in Alloy.
- "load_template"
- Given a filename or a string reference will return a "document"
hashref hash that contains the parsed tree.
my $doc = $self->load_template($file); # errors die
This method handles the in-memory caching of the document.
- "load_tree"
- Given the "document" hashref, will either load the parsed AST
from file (if configured to do so), or will load the content, parse the
content using the Parse role, and will return the tree. File based caching
of the parsed AST happens here.
- "load_perl"
- Only used if COMPILE_PERL is true (default is false).
Given the "document" hashref, will either load the
compiled perl from file (if configured to do so), or will load the AST
using "load_tree", will compile a new perl code document using
the Compile role, and will return the perl code. File based caching of
the compiled perl happens here.
- "parse_tree"
- Parses the passed string ref with the appropriate template syntax.
See Template::Alloy::Parse for more details.
- "parse_expr"
- Parses the passed string ref for a variable or expression.
See Template::Alloy::Parse for more details.
- "parse_args"
- See Template::Alloy::Parse for more details.
- "set_variable"
- Used to set a variable. Expects a variable identity array and the value to
set. It will autovifiy as necessary.
- "strict_throw"
- Called during processing of template when STRICT configuration is set and
an uninitialized variable is met. Arguments are the variable identity
reference. Will call STRICT_THROW configuration item if set, otherwise
will call throw with a useful message.
- "throw"
- Creates an exception object from the arguments and dies.
- "undefined_any"
- Called during play_expr if a value is returned that is undefined. This
could be used to magically create variables on the fly. This is similar to
Template::Stash::undefined. It is suggested that undefined_get be used
instead. Default behavior returns undef. You may also pass a coderef via
the UNDEFINED_ANY configuration variable. Also, you can try using the
DEBUG => 'undef', configuration option which will throw an error on
undefined variables.
- "undefined_get"
- Called when a variable is undefined during a GET directive. This is useful
to see if a value that is about to get inserted into the text is
undefined. undefined_any is a little too general for most cases. Also, you
may pass a coderef via the UNDEFINED_GET configuration variable.
The following is a brief list of other methods used by Alloy. Generally, these
shouldn't be overwritten by subclasses.
- "ast_string"
- Returns perl code representation of a variable.
- "context"
- Used to create a "pseudo" context object that allows for
portability of TT plugins, filters, and perl blocks that need a context
object. Uses the Template::Alloy::Context class.
- "debug_node"
- Used to get debug info on a directive if DEBUG_DIRS is set.
- "get_line_number_by_index"
- Used to turn string index position into line number
- "interpolate_node"
- Used for parsing text nodes for dollar variables when interpolate is
on.
- "play_operator"
- Provided by the Operator role. Allows for playing an operator AST.
See Template::Alloy::Operator for more details.
- "apply_precedence"
- Provided by the Parse role. Allows for parsed operator array to be
translated to a tree based upon operator precedence.
- "_process"
- Called by process and the PROCESS, INCLUDE and other directives.
- "slurp"
- Reads contents of passed filename - throws file exception on error.
- "split_paths"
- Used to split INCLUDE_PATH or other directives if an arrayref is not
passed.
- "tt_var_string"
- Returns a template toolkit representation of a variable.
- "_vars"
- Return a reference to the current stash of variables. This is currently
only used by the pseudo context object and may disappear at some
point.
Thanks to Andy Wardley for creating Template::Toolkit.
Thanks to Sam Tregar for creating HTML::Template.
Thanks to David Lowe for creating Text::Tmpl.
Thanks to the Apache Velocity guys.
Thanks to Ben Grimm for a patch to allow passing a parsed document
to the ->process method.
Thanks to David Warring for finding a parse error in HTE
syntax.
Thanks to Carl Franks for adding the base ENCODING support.
Paul Seamons <paul@seamons.com>
This module may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.
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