NAME Template::Declare - Perlish declarative templates SYNOPSIS "Template::Declare" is a pure-perl declarative HTML/XUL/XML templating system. Yes. Another one. There are many others like it, but this one is ours. A few key features and buzzwords: All templates are 100% pure perl code Simple declarative syntax No angle brackets "Native" XML namespace and declarator support Mixins Inheritance Public and private templates USAGE Basic usage ############################## # Basic HTML usage: ############################### package MyApp::Templates; use Template::Declare::Tags; # defaults to 'HTML' use base 'Template::Declare'; template simple => sub { html { head {} body { p {'Hello, world wide web!'} } } }; package main; use Template::Declare; Template::Declare->init( roots => ['MyApp::Templates']); print Template::Declare->show( 'simple'); # Output: # # # # # #

Hello, world wide web! #

# # ############################### # Let's do XUL! ############################### package MyApp::Templates; use base 'Template::Declare'; use Template::Declare::Tags 'XUL'; template main => sub { xml_decl { 'xml', version => '1.0' }; xml_decl { 'xml-stylesheet', href => "chrome://global/skin/", type => "text/css" }; groupbox { caption { attr { label => 'Colors' } } radiogroup { for my $id ( qw< orange violet yellow > ) { radio { attr { id => $id, label => ucfirst($id), $id eq 'violet' ? (selected => 'true') : () } } } # for } } }; package main; Template::Declare->init( roots => ['MyApp::Templates']); print Template::Declare->show('main') # Output: # # # # # # # # # # # # A slightly more advanced example In this example, we'll show off how to set attributes on HTML tags, how to call other templates and how to declare a *private* template that can't be called directly. We'll also show passing arguments to templates. package MyApp::Templates; use Template::Declare::Tags; use base 'Template::Declare'; private template 'header' => sub { head { title { 'This is a webpage'}; meta { attr { generator => "This is not your father's frontpage"}} } }; private template 'footer' => sub { my $self = shift; my $time = shift || gmtime; div { attr { id => "footer"}; "Page last generated at $time." } }; template simple => sub { my $self = shift; my $user = shift || 'world wide web'; html { show('header'); body { p { attr { class => 'greeting'}; "Hello, $user!"}; }; show('footer'); } }; package main; use Template::Declare; Template::Declare->init( roots => ['MyApp::Templates']); print Template::Declare->show( 'simple', 'TD user'); # Output: # # # # This is a webpage # # # # #

Hello, TD user! #

# # # For more options, especially the "native" XML namespace support and more samples, see Template::Declare::Tags. Postprocessing Sometimes you just want simple syntax for inline elements. The following shows how to use a postprocessor to emphasize text _like this_. package MyApp::Templates; use Template::Declare::Tags; use base 'Template::Declare'; template before => sub { h1 { outs "Welcome to "; em { "my"}; outs " site. It's "; em { "great"}; outs "!"; }; }; template after => sub { h1 { "Welcome to _my_ site. It's _great_!"}; h2 { outs_raw "This is _not_ emphasized."}; }; package main; use Template::Declare; Template::Declare->init( roots => ['MyApp::Templates'], postprocessor => \&emphasize); print Template::Declare->show( 'before'); print Template::Declare->show( 'after'); sub emphasize { my $text = shift; $text =~ s{_(.+?)_}{$1}g; return $text; } # Output: # #

Welcome to # my site. It's # great!

#

Welcome to my site. It's great!

#

This is _not_ emphasized.

Multiple template roots (search paths) Inheritance Aliasing METHODS init This *class method* initializes the "Template::Declare" system. roots postprocessor show TEMPLATE_NAME Call "show" with a "template_name" and "Template::Declare" will render that template. Content generated by show can be accessed with the "output" method if the output method you've chosen returns content instead of outputting it directly. (If called in scalar context, this method will also just return the content when available). alias alias Some::Clever::Mixin under '/mixin'; import_templates import_templates Wifty::UI::something under '/something'; path_for $template Returns the path for the template name to be used for show, adjusted with paths used in import_templates. has_template PACKAGE TEMPLATE_NAME SHOW_PRIVATE Takes a package, template name and a boolean. The boolean determines whether to show private templates. Returns a reference to the template's code if found. Otherwise, returns undef. This method is an alias for "resolve_template" resolve_template TEMPLATE_PATH INCLUDE_PRIVATE_TEMPLATES Turns a template path ("TEMPLATE_PATH") into a "CODEREF". If the boolean "INCLUDE_PRIVATE_TEMPLATES" is true, resolves private template in addition to public ones. First it looks through all the valid Template::Declare roots. For each root, it looks to see if the root has a template called $template_name directly (or via an "import" statement). Then it looks to see if there are any "alias"ed paths for the root with prefixes that match the template we're looking for. register_template PACKAGE TEMPLATE_NAME CODEREF This method registers a template called "TEMPLATE_NAME" in package "PACKAGE". As you might guess, "CODEREF" defines the template's implementation. register_template PACKAGE TEMPLATE_NAME CODEREF This method registers a private template called "TEMPLATE_NAME" in package "PACKAGE". As you might guess, "CODEREF" defines the template's implementation. Private templates can't be called directly from user code but only from other templates. PITFALLS We're reusing the perl interpreter for our templating langauge, but Perl was not designed specifically for our purpose here. Here are some known pitfalls while you're scripting your templates with this module. * It's quite common to see tag sub calling statements without trailing semi-colons right after "}". For instance, template foo => { p { a { attr { src => '1.png' } } a { attr { src => '2.png' } } a { attr { src => '3.png' } } } }; is equivalent to template foo => { p { a { attr { src => '1.png' } }; a { attr { src => '2.png' } }; a { attr { src => '3.png' } }; }; }; But "xml_decl" is a notable exception. Please always put a trailing semicolon after "xml_decl { ... }", or you'll mess up the outputs. * Another place that requires trailing semicolon is the statements before a Perl looping statement, an if statement, or a "show" call. For example: p { "My links:" }; for (@links) { with( src => $_ ), a {} } The ";" after " p { ... } " is required here, or Perl will complaint about syntax errors. * Literal strings that have tag siblings won't be captured. So the following template p { 'hello'; em { 'world' } } produces

world

instead of the desired output

hello world

You can use "outs" here to solve this problem: p { outs 'hello'; em { 'world' } } Note you can always get rid of the "outs" crap if the string literal is the only element of the containing block: p { 'hello, world!' } BUGS Crawling all over, baby. Be very, very careful. This code is so cutting edge, it can only be fashioned from carbon nanotubes. But we're already using this thing in production :) Make sure you have read the PITFALL section above :) Some specific bugs and design flaws that we'd love to see fixed. Output isn't streamy. If you run into bugs or misfeatures, please report them to "bug-template-declare@rt.cpan.org". SEE ALSO Template::Declare::Tags, Template::Declare::TagSet, Template::Declare::TagSet::HTML, Template::Declare::TagSet::XUL, Jifty. AUTHOR Jesse Vincent COPYRIGHT Copyright 2006-2007 Best Practical Solutions, LLC