Solid is an implementation in Elixir of the template language Liquid. It uses nimble_parsec to generate the parser.
iex> template = "My name is {{ user.name }}"
iex> {:ok, template} = Solid.parse(template)
iex> Solid.render!(template, %{ "user" => %{ "name" => "José" } }) |> to_string
"My name is José"
The package can be installed with:
def deps do
[{:solid, "~> 0.14"}]
end
To implement a new tag you need to create a new module that implements the Tag
behaviour:
defmodule MyCustomTag do
import NimbleParsec
@behaviour Solid.Tag
@impl true
def spec(_parser) do
space = Solid.Parser.Literal.whitespace(min: 0)
ignore(string("{%"))
|> ignore(space)
|> ignore(string("my_tag"))
|> ignore(space)
|> ignore(string("%}"))
end
@impl true
def render(tag, _context, _options) do
[text: "my first tag"]
end
end
spec
defines how to parse your tag;render
defines how to render your tag.
Now we need to add the tag to the parser
defmodule MyParser do
use Solid.Parser.Base, custom_tags: [MyCustomTag]
end
And finally pass the custom parser as an option:
"{% my_tag %}"
|> Solid.parse!(parser: MyParser)
|> Solid.render()
While calling Solid.render
one can pass a module with custom filters:
defmodule MyCustomFilters do
def add_one(x), do: x + 1
end
"{{ number | add_one }}"
|> Solid.parse!()
|> Solid.render(%{ "number" => 41}, custom_filters: MyCustomFilters)
|> IO.puts()
# 42
Extra options can be passed as last argument to custom filters if an extra argument is accepted:
defmodule MyCustomFilters do
def asset_url(path, opts) do
opts[:host] <> path
end
end
opts = [custom_filters: MyCustomFilters, host: "http://example.com"]
"{{ file_path | asset_url }}"
|> Solid.parse!()
|> Solid.render(%{ "file_path" => "/styles/app.css"}, opts)
|> IO.puts()
# http://example.com/styles/app.css
Solid.render/3
doesn't raise or return errors unless strict_variables: true
or strict_filters: true
are passed as options.
If there are any missing variables/filters Solid.render/3
returns {:error, errors, result}
where errors is the list of collected errors and result
is the rendered template.
Solid.render!/3
raises if strict_variables: true
is passed and there are missing variables.
Solid.render!/3
raises if strict_filters: true
is passed and there are missing filters.
When adding new functionality or fixing bugs consider adding a new test case here inside test/cases
. These cases are tested against the Ruby gem so we can try to stay as close as possible to the original implementation.
- Integration tests using Liquid gem to build fixtures; #3
- All the standard filters #8
- Support to custom filters #11
- Tags (if, case, unless, etc)
- Boolean operators #2
- Whitespace control #10
Copyright (c) 2016-2022 Eduardo Gurgel Pinho
This work is free. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the MIT License. See the LICENSE.md file for more details.