Trimmed mustache logic-less templates
Implements everything from Mustache.5
except for lambdas in < 200 lines of code. Plus four new things. Implied closing tags
{{/}}
, Self referencer {{.}}
, Existence check {{?exists}}{{/exists}}
and data pusher
{{< blah}}{{/blah}}
, {{:default}}
Compiles an inline script to javascript code
Compiles all the templates and sets the entry point to the template name
Compiles all the templates and returns a template object.
stachio = Stache()
stachio.add_template('template_name', templatefile.read())
write('var t = ' + stachio.render_all_js() ';')
var content = t['template_name']([{myparams:3}])
$("#container").html(content)
Because the current Pystache implementation
has holes. And because I wanted to learn about python generators. As a result
my codebase is considerabley smaller and easier to grok too(at least for me). It consists
of two main methods, _tokenize
, and _parse
, both python generators. _tokenize
creates
tokens and _parse
consumes and renders them. Also benchmarking the two with my tests,
mine was slightly faster, around 2x to 3x.
Renders the value of tag, html escaped, within the current scope
Don't html escape the value
Section blocks. Renders the enclosed block if
section
is truesection
exists
If section
exists and is a(n):
- Array: It renders the enclosed block for each element in the array, placing the current element in scope
- Dict: It renders the enclosed block once and places the Dict as the current scope
Renders the enclosed block if invert
is an empty string, empty array, false,
or doesn't exist. The opposite the the section block.
Ignores the text within the tag
Looks up the partial
template and renders it with the current context
Whenever you use {{/}} it implies the closing of the nearest block.
{{#open}}stuff goes here{{/}}
Is the same as:
{{#open}}stuff goes here{{/open}}
This renders the current "scope". This is useful if you want to iterate over an array and wrap them.
{{#array}}<li>{{.}}</li>\n{{/array}}
with array = [1,2,3,'yay']
will produce:
<li>1</li>
<li>2</li>
<li>3</li>
<li>yay</li>
Forces a check of the tag name, rather than imply that it is a section block. This is useful for check if an array has members rather than iterate over the members
{{?array}}
stuff\n
{{/}}
with {array: [1, 2, 3, 4]}
results in:
stuff
as opposed to
{{#array}}
stuff\n
{{/}}
which would render
stuff
stuff
stuff
stuff
This is equivalent to {{default}}{{^default}}stuff{{/}}
It renders the enclosed section if default doesn't exist, empty or false
It renders the inner block and adds it to the global scope.
{{<thing}}
It takes this. You can put anything in here.
{{tags}}, {{#blocks}}{{/blocks}}, etc.
{{/thing}}
and it populates the global scope with a key of thing
. Watch out, it can override
existing vars. A convention such as
{{<namespace.thing}}{{/namespace.thing}}
or similiar will help with collisions. This is helpful if you want to use stache templates for masterpages/inheritance. Lets say you have these templates:
<div id="header">
{{header}}
</div>
<div id="footer">
{{footer}}
</div>
{{<header}}
{{name}}
{{/header}}
{{<footer}}
footer
{{/footer}}
{{>master}}
Rendering the page
template with {'name': 'Stachio'}
will produce
<div id="header">
Stachio
</div>
<div id="footer">
footer
</div>
You can also apply the inverted block or default block to supply default blocks
<div id="header">
{{header}}
{{^header}}Default Header{{/header}}
</div>
<div id="footer">
{{:footer}}Default Footer{{/footer}}
</div>
Rendering {{<footer}}Custom Footer{{/footer}}{{>master}}
with {}
will produce
<div id="header">
Default Header
</div>
<div id="footer">
Custom Footer
</div>
pip install stache
You can run python test.py
or if you have nosetests:
cd stache
nosetests
python test.py
>>> from Stache import Stache
>>> Stache().render("Hello {{who}}!", dict(who="World"))
Hello World
or
>>> import Stache
>>> Stache.render("Hello {{world}}!", dict(world="Stache!"))
Hello Stache!
>>> from Stache import Stache
>>> stachio = Stache()
>>> stachio.add_template('main', 'a = {{a}};')
>>> stachio.add_template('main1', 'b = [ {{#b}}{{.}} {{/b}}];')
>>> stachio.add_template('main2', 'stachio')
>>> stachio.add_template('woah', '{{>main}} {{>main1}} {{>main2}}')
>>> stachio.render_template('woah',dict(a=1, b=[1,2,3,4,5]))
a = 1; b = [ 1 2 3 4 5 ] stachio
If you want to put in dynamic file loading of partials you can override
Stache().templates
with a dict()
like object and override the __get__
and
load the template in __get__
if it doesn't exist. Once you load up the template,
you'll need to call self.add_template(template_name, template)
to tokenize the
template.
I don't think this is ideal though... Ideas for populating partials are welcome.
For wsgi apps that support async, you can yield parts of the rendered template as
they render. render_iter
and render_template_iter
both produce iterators that
are yield'ed as it is generated.
>>> for part in Stache.render_iter("Hello {{world}}!", dict(world="Stache!")):
>>> yield part
Hello
Stache!
I'm wary of lambdas, because I want the templates to be language agnostic. The main reason I liked Mustache in the first place is because of possibility of template reuse.
Some future ideas I have is rendering to javascript templates to be used on browser frontend, bypassing the need for a client side script to compile it into javascript