gber
Notice
While Gber is perfectly fine and stable to use, I've been working on a direct Pug.js port for Go. It is somewhat hacky at the moment but take a look at Pug.go if you are looking for a Pug.js compatible Go template engine.
Usage
import "github.com/gad-lang/gber"
Gber is an elegant templating engine for Go Programming Language
It is inspired from HAML and Jade
Tags
A tag is simply a word:
html
is converted to
<html></html>
It is possible to add ID and CLASS attributes to tags:
div#main
span.time
are converted to
<div id="main"></div>
<span class="time"></span>
Any arbitrary attribute name / value pair can be added this way:
a[href="http://www.google.com"]
You can mix multiple attributes together
a#someid[href="/"][title="Main Page"].main.link Click Link
gets converted to
<a id="someid" class="main link" href="/" title="Main Page">Click Link</a>
It is also possible to define these attributes within the block of a tag
a
#someid
[href="/"]
[title="Main Page"]
.main
.link
| Click Link
Doctypes
To add a doctype, use !!!
or doctype
keywords:
!!! transitional
// <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
or use doctype
doctype 5
// <!DOCTYPE html>
Available options: 5
, default
, xml
, transitional
, strict
, frameset
, 1.1
, basic
, mobile
Tag Content
For single line tag text, you can just append the text after tag name:
p Testing!
would yield
<p>Testing!</p>
For multi line tag text, or nested tags, use indentation:
html
head
title Page Title
body
div#content
p
| This is a long page content
| These lines are all part of the parent p
a[href="/"] Go To Main Page
Data
Input template data can be reached by key names directly. For example, assuming the template has been
executed with following JSON data:
{
"Name": "Ekin",
"LastName": "Koc",
"Repositories": [
"gber",
"dateformat"
],
"Avatar": "/images/ekin.jpg",
"Friends": 17
}
It is possible to interpolate fields using ${}
p Welcome ${Name}!
would print
<p>Welcome Ekin!</p>
Attributes can have field names as well
a[title=Name][href="/ekin.koc"]
would print
<a title="Ekin" href="/ekin.koc"></a>
Expressions
Gber can expand basic expressions. For example, it is possible to concatenate strings with + operator:
p Welcome ${Name + " " + LastName}
Arithmetic expressions are also supported:
p You need ${50 - Friends} more friends to reach 50!
Expressions can be used within attributes
img[alt=Name + " " + LastName][src=Avatar]
Variables
It is possible to define dynamic variables within templates,
all variables must start with a $ character and can be assigned as in the following example:
div
$fullname = Name + " " + LastName
p Welcome ${$fullname}
If you need to access the supplied data itself (i.e. the object containing Name, LastName etc fields.) you can use $
variable
p $.Name
Conditions
For conditional blocks, it is possible to use if <expression>
div
if Friends > 10
p You have more than 10 friends
else if Friends > 5
p You have more than 5 friends
else
p You need more friends
Again, it is possible to use arithmetic and boolean operators
div
if Name == "Ekin" && LastName == "Koc"
p Hey! I know you..
There is a special syntax for conditional attributes. Only block attributes can have conditions;
div
.hasfriends ? Friends > 0
This would yield a div with hasfriends
class only if the Friends > 0
condition holds. It is
perfectly fine to use the same method for other types of attributes:
div
#foo ? Name == "Ekin"
[bar=baz] ? len(Repositories) > 0
Iterations
It is possible to iterate over arrays and maps using each
:
each $repo in Repositories
p ${$repo}
would print
p gber
p dateformat
It is also possible to iterate over values and indexes at the same time
each $i, $repo in Repositories
p
.even ? $i % 2 == 0
.odd ? $i % 2 == 1
Mixins
Mixins (reusable template blocks that accept arguments) can be defined:
mixin surprise
span Surprise!
mixin link($href, $title, $text)
a[href=$href][title=$title] ${$text}
and then called multiple times within a template (or even within another mixin definition):
div
+surprise
+surprise
+link("http://google.com", "Google", "Check out Google")
Template data, variables, expressions, etc., can all be passed as arguments:
+link(GoogleUrl, $googleTitle, "Check out " + $googleTitle)
Imports
A template can import other templates using import
:
a.gber
p this is template a
b.gber
p this is template b
c.gber
div
import a
import b
gets compiled to
div
p this is template a
p this is template b
Inheritance
A template can inherit other templates. In order to inherit another template, an extends
keyword should be used.
Parent template can define several named blocks and child template can modify the blocks.
master.gber
!!! 5
html
head
block meta
meta[name="description"][content="This is a great website"]
title
block title
| Default title
body
block content
subpage.gber
extends master
block title
| Some sub page!
block append meta
// This will be added after the description meta tag. It is also possible
// to prepend someting to an existing block
meta[name="keywords"][content="foo bar"]
block content
div#main
p Some content here
License
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2012 Ekin Koc ekin@eknkc.com
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Usage
var DefaultOptions = Options{true, false}
var DefaultDirOptions = DirOptions{".gber", true}
func Compile
func Compile(input string, options Options) (*template.Template, error)
Parses and compiles the supplied gber template string. Returns corresponding Go
Template (html/templates) instance. Necessary runtime functions will be injected
and the template will be ready to be executed.
func CompileFile
func CompileFile(filename string, options Options) (*template.Template, error)
Parses and compiles the contents of supplied filename. Returns corresponding Go
Template (html/templates) instance. Necessary runtime functions will be injected
and the template will be ready to be executed.
func CompileDir
func CompileDir(dirname string, dopt DirOptions, opt Options) (map[string]*template.Template, error)
Parses and compiles the contents of a supplied directory name. Returns a mapping of template name (extension stripped) to corresponding Go Template (html/template) instance. Necessary runtime functions will be injected and the template will be ready to be executed.
If there are templates in subdirectories, its key in the map will be it's path relative to dirname
. For example:
templates/
|-- index.gber
|-- layouts/
|-- base.gber
templates, err := gber.CompileDir("templates/", gber.DefaultDirOptions, gber.DefaultOptions)
templates["index"]
templates["layouts/base"]
By default, the search will be recursive and will match only files ending in ".gber". If recursive is turned off, it will only search the top level of the directory. Specified extension must start with a period.
type Compiler
type Compiler struct {
Options
}
Compiler is the main interface of Gber Template Engine. In order to use an
Gber template, it is required to create a Compiler and compile an Gber source
to native Go template.
compiler := gber.New()
// Parse the input file
err := compiler.ParseFile("./input.gber")
if err == nil {
// Compile input file to Go template
tpl, err := compiler.Compile()
if err == nil {
// Check built in html/template documentation for further details
tpl.Execute(os.Stdout, somedata)
}
}
func New
func New() *Compiler
Create and initialize a new Compiler
func (*Compiler) Compile
func (c *Compiler) Compile() (*template.Template, error)
Compile gber and create a Go Template (html/templates) instance. Necessary
runtime functions will be injected and the template will be ready to be
executed.
func (*Compiler) CompileString
func (c *Compiler) CompileString() (string, error)
Compile template and return the Go Template source You would not be using this
unless debugging / checking the output. Please use Compile method to obtain a
template instance directly.
func (*Compiler) CompileWriter
func (c *Compiler) CompileWriter(out io.Writer) (err error)
Compile gber and write the Go Template source into given io.Writer instance You
would not be using this unless debugging / checking the output. Please use
Compile method to obtain a template instance directly.
func (*Compiler) Parse
func (c *Compiler) Parse(input string) (err error)
Parse given raw gber template string.
func (*Compiler) ParseFile
func (c *Compiler) ParseFile(filename string) (err error)
Parse the gber template file in given path
type Options
type Options struct {
PrettyPrint bool
LineNumbers bool
}
type DirOptions
type DirOptions struct {
Ext string
Recursive bool
}