mustache

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Published: Aug 24, 2023 License: MIT Imports: 10 Imported by: 0

README

Mustache Template Engine for Go

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Why a Fork?

I forked hoisie/mustache because it does not appear to be maintained, and I wanted to add the following functionality:

  • Update the API to follow the idiomatic Go convention of returning errors (this is a breaking change)
  • Add option to treat missing variables as errors

CLI Overview

➜  ~ go install github.com/cbroglie/mustache/cmd/mustache@latest
➜  ~ mustache
Usage:
  mustache [data] template [flags]

Examples:
  $ mustache data.yml template.mustache
  $ cat data.yml | mustache template.mustache
  $ mustache --layout wrapper.mustache data template.mustache
  $ mustache --overide over.yml data.yml template.mustache

Flags:
  -h, --help   help for mustache
  --layout     a file to use as the layout template
  --override   a data.yml file whose definitions supercede data.yml
➜  ~

Package Overview

This library is an implementation of the Mustache template language in Go.

Mustache Spec Compliance

mustache/spec contains the formal standard for Mustache, and it is included as a submodule (using v1.2.1) for testing compliance. All of the tests pass (big thanks to kei10in), with the exception of the null interpolation tests added in v1.2.1. There is experimental support for a subset of the optional lambda functionality (thanks to fromhut). The optional inheritance functionality has not been implemented.


Documentation

For more information about mustache, check out the mustache project page or the mustache manual.

Also check out some example mustache files.


Installation

To install the CLI, run go install github.com/cbroglie/mustache/cmd/mustache@latest. To use it in a program, run go get github.com/cbroglie/mustache and use import "github.com/cbroglie/mustache".


Usage

There are four main methods in this package:

Render(data string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderFile(filename string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

ParseString(data string) (*Template, error)

ParseFile(filename string) (*Template, error)

There are also two additional methods for using layouts (explained below); as well as several more that can provide a custom Partial retrieval.

The Render method takes a string and a data source, which is generally a map or struct, and returns the output string. If the template file contains an error, the return value is a description of the error. There's a similar method, RenderFile, which takes a filename as an argument and uses that for the template contents.

data, err := mustache.Render("hello {{c}}", map[string]string{"c": "world"})

If you're planning to render the same template multiple times, you do it efficiently by compiling the template first:

tmpl, _ := mustache.ParseString("hello {{c}}")
var buf bytes.Buffer
for i := 0; i < 10; i++ {
    tmpl.FRender(&buf, map[string]string{"c": "world"})
}

For more example usage, please see mustache_test.go


Escaping

mustache.go follows the official mustache HTML escaping rules. That is, if you enclose a variable with two curly brackets, {{var}}, the contents are HTML-escaped. For instance, strings like 5 > 2 are converted to 5 &gt; 2. To use raw characters, use three curly brackets {{{var}}}.


Layouts

It is a common pattern to include a template file as a "wrapper" for other templates. The wrapper may include a header and a footer, for instance. Mustache.go supports this pattern with the following two methods:

RenderInLayout(data string, layout string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderFileInLayout(filename string, layoutFile string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

The layout file must have a variable called {{content}}. For example, given the following files:

layout.html.mustache:

<html>
<head><title>Hi</title></head>
<body>
{{{content}}}
</body>
</html>

template.html.mustache:

<h1>Hello World!</h1>

A call to RenderFileInLayout("template.html.mustache", "layout.html.mustache", nil) will produce:

<html>
<head><title>Hi</title></head>
<body>
<h1>Hello World!</h1>
</body>
</html>

Custom PartialProvider

Mustache.go has been extended to support a user-defined repository for mustache partials, instead of the default of requiring file-based templates.

Several new top-level functions have been introduced to take advantage of this:


func RenderPartials(data string, partials PartialProvider, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

func RenderInLayoutPartials(data string, layoutData string, partials PartialProvider, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

func ParseStringPartials(data string, partials PartialProvider) (*Template, error)

func ParseFilePartials(filename string, partials PartialProvider) (*Template, error)

A PartialProvider is any object that responds to Get(string) (*Template,error), and two examples are provided- a FileProvider that recreates the old behavior (and is indeed used internally for backwards compatibility); and a StaticProvider alias for a map[string]string. Using either of these is simple:


fp := &FileProvider{
  Paths: []string{ "", "/opt/mustache", "templates/" },
  Extensions: []string{ "", ".stache", ".mustache" },
}

tmpl, err := ParseStringPartials("This partial is loaded from a file: {{>foo}}", fp)

sp := StaticProvider(map[string]string{
  "foo": "{{>bar}}",
  "bar": "some data",
})

tmpl, err := ParseStringPartials("This partial is loaded from a map: {{>foo}}", sp)

A note about method receivers

Mustache.go supports calling methods on objects, but you have to be aware of Go's limitations. For example, lets's say you have the following type:

type Person struct {
    FirstName string
    LastName string
}

func (p *Person) Name1() string {
    return p.FirstName + " " + p.LastName
}

func (p Person) Name2() string {
    return p.FirstName + " " + p.LastName
}

While they appear to be identical methods, Name1 has a pointer receiver, and Name2 has a value receiver. Objects of type Person(non-pointer) can only access Name2, while objects of type *Person(person) can access both. This is by design in the Go language.

So if you write the following:

mustache.Render("{{Name1}}", Person{"John", "Smith"})

It'll be blank. You either have to use &Person{"John", "Smith"}, or call Name2

Supported features

  • Variables
  • Comments
  • Change delimiter
  • Sections (boolean, enumerable, and inverted)
  • Partials

Documentation

Index

Constants

View Source
const (
	SkipWhitespaceTagTypes = "#^/<>=!"
)

Skip all whitespaces apeared after these types of tags until end of line if the line only contains a tag and whitespaces.

Variables

View Source
var (
	// AllowMissingVariables defines the behavior for a variable "miss." If it
	// is true (the default), an empty string is emitted. If it is false, an error
	// is generated instead.
	AllowMissingVariables = true
)

Functions

func Render

func Render(data string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

Render compiles a mustache template string and uses the the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the template and return the output.

func RenderFile

func RenderFile(filename string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderFile loads a mustache template string from a file and compiles it, and then uses the the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the template and return the output.

func RenderFileInLayout

func RenderFileInLayout(filename string, layoutFile string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderFileInLayout loads a mustache template string and layout "wrapper" template string from files and compiles them, and then uses the the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled templates and return the output.

func RenderInLayout

func RenderInLayout(data string, layoutData string, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderInLayout compiles a mustache template string and layout "wrapper" and uses the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled templates and return the output.

func RenderInLayoutPartials

func RenderInLayoutPartials(data string, layoutData string, partials PartialProvider, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderInLayoutPartials compiles a mustache template string and layout "wrapper" and uses the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled templates and return the output.

func RenderPartials

func RenderPartials(data string, partials PartialProvider, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderPartials compiles a mustache template string and uses the the given partial provider and data source - generally a map or struct - to render the template and return the output.

func RenderPartialsRaw

func RenderPartialsRaw(data string, partials PartialProvider, forceRaw bool, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderPartialsRaw compiles a mustache template string and uses the the given partial provider and data source - generally a map or struct - to render the template and return the output.

func RenderRaw

func RenderRaw(data string, forceRaw bool, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderRaw compiles a mustache template string and uses the the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the template and return the output.

Types

type ErrorCode

type ErrorCode string

ErrorCode is the list of allowed values for the error's code.

const (
	ErrUnmatchedOpenTag      ErrorCode = "unmatched_open_tag"
	ErrEmptyTag              ErrorCode = "empty_tag"
	ErrSectionNoClosingTag   ErrorCode = "section_no_closing_tag"
	ErrInterleavedClosingTag ErrorCode = "interleaved_closing_tag"
	ErrInvalidMetaTag        ErrorCode = "invalid_meta_tag"
	ErrUnmatchedCloseTag     ErrorCode = "unmatched_close_tag"
)

List of values that ErrorCode can take.

type EscapeFunc

type EscapeFunc func(text string) string

EscapeFunc is used for escaping non-raw values in templates.

type FileProvider

type FileProvider struct {
	Paths      []string
	Extensions []string
}

FileProvider implements the PartialProvider interface by providing partials drawn from a filesystem. When a partial named `NAME` is requested, FileProvider searches each listed path for a file named as `NAME` followed by any of the listed extensions. The default for `Paths` is to search the current working directory. The default for `Extensions` is to examine, in order, no extension; then ".mustache"; then ".stache".

func (*FileProvider) Get

func (fp *FileProvider) Get(name string) (string, error)

Get accepts the name of a partial and returns the parsed partial.

type LambdaFunc

type LambdaFunc func(text string, render RenderFunc) (string, error)

LambdaFunc is the signature for lambda functions.

type ParseError

type ParseError struct {
	// Line contains the line of the error
	Line int
	// Code contains the error code of the error
	Code ErrorCode
	// Reason contains the name of the element generating the error
	Reason string
}

ParseError represents an error during the parsing

func (ParseError) Error

func (e ParseError) Error() string

type PartialProvider

type PartialProvider interface {
	// Get accepts the name of a partial and returns the parsed partial, if it could be found; a valid but empty
	// template, if it could not be found; or nil and error if an error occurred (other than an inability to find
	// the partial).
	Get(name string) (string, error)
}

PartialProvider comprises the behaviors required of a struct to be able to provide partials to the mustache rendering engine.

type RenderFunc

type RenderFunc func(text string) (string, error)

RenderFunc is provided to lambda functions for rendering.

type StaticProvider

type StaticProvider struct {
	Partials map[string]string
}

StaticProvider implements the PartialProvider interface by providing partials drawn from a map, which maps partial name to template contents.

func (*StaticProvider) Get

func (sp *StaticProvider) Get(name string) (string, error)

Get accepts the name of a partial and returns the parsed partial.

type Tag

type Tag interface {
	// Type returns the type of the tag.
	Type() TagType
	// Name returns the name of the tag.
	Name() string
	// Tags returns any child tags. It panics for tag types which cannot contain
	// child tags (i.e. variable tags).
	Tags() []Tag
}

Tag represents the different mustache tag types.

Not all methods apply to all kinds of tags. Restrictions, if any, are noted in the documentation for each method. Use the Type method to find out the type of tag before calling type-specific methods. Calling a method inappropriate to the type of tag causes a run time panic.

type TagType

type TagType uint

A TagType represents the specific type of mustache tag that a Tag represents. The zero TagType is not a valid type.

const (
	Invalid TagType = iota
	Variable
	Section
	InvertedSection
	Partial
)

Defines representing the possible Tag types

func (TagType) String

func (t TagType) String() string

type Template

type Template struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Template represents a compilde mustache template

func ParseFile

func ParseFile(filename string) (*Template, error)

ParseFile loads a mustache template string from a file and compiles it. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func ParseFilePartials

func ParseFilePartials(filename string, partials PartialProvider) (*Template, error)

ParseFilePartials loads a mustache template string from a file, retrieving any required partials from the given provider, and compiles it. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func ParseFilePartialsRaw

func ParseFilePartialsRaw(filename string, forceRaw bool, partials PartialProvider) (*Template, error)

ParseFilePartialsRaw loads a mustache template string from a file, retrieving any required partials from the given provider, and compiles it. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func ParseString

func ParseString(data string) (*Template, error)

ParseString compiles a mustache template string. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func ParseStringPartials

func ParseStringPartials(data string, partials PartialProvider) (*Template, error)

ParseStringPartials compiles a mustache template string, retrieving any required partials from the given provider. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func ParseStringPartialsRaw

func ParseStringPartialsRaw(data string, partials PartialProvider, forceRaw bool) (*Template, error)

ParseStringPartialsRaw compiles a mustache template string, retrieving any required partials from the given provider. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func ParseStringRaw

func ParseStringRaw(data string, forceRaw bool) (*Template, error)

ParseStringRaw compiles a mustache template string. The resulting output can be used to efficiently render the template multiple times with different data sources.

func (*Template) Escape

func (tmpl *Template) Escape(fn EscapeFunc)

Escape sets custom escape function. By-default it is HTMLEscape.

func (*Template) FRender

func (tmpl *Template) FRender(out io.Writer, context ...interface{}) error

FRender uses the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled template to an io.Writer.

func (*Template) FRenderInLayout

func (tmpl *Template) FRenderInLayout(out io.Writer, layout *Template, context ...interface{}) error

FRenderInLayout uses the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled templated a loayout "wrapper" template to an io.Writer.

func (*Template) Render

func (tmpl *Template) Render(context ...interface{}) (string, error)

Render uses the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled template and return the output.

func (*Template) RenderInLayout

func (tmpl *Template) RenderInLayout(layout *Template, context ...interface{}) (string, error)

RenderInLayout uses the given data source - generally a map or struct - to render the compiled template and layout "wrapper" template and return the output.

func (*Template) Tags

func (tmpl *Template) Tags() []Tag

Tags returns the mustache tags for the given template

Directories

Path Synopsis
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