whisker is inspired by Mustache but is more stable, robust and predictable. It is a fast template engine for V with a simple syntax.
- Logic-less: Different but expressive and powerful.
- Four Data Types: Booleans, Strings, Lists, and Maps.
- Composable: Supports nested iteration and partial recursion.
- Simple Data Model: Template data be constructed in V source code or imported and exported using JSON.
- Partials: External, partial templates can be plugged into the primary template.
- Safe by Default: Tag contents are HTML escaped by default.
- Customisable: The delimiters can be changed from the default
{{...}}
.
The following blog posts provide more context:
- Announcing whisker - easier way to do templates in V: We take a look at current template engines available in V and announce a new template engine.
- Writing whisker’s tokeniser using the Theory of Computation: We show how we use fundamental CS principles to implement an FSM-based tokeniser for whisker.
You must have V installed. Refer to the official instructions for help with installation.
If you already have V installed, use v up
to update the toolchain and standard
library.
v install hungrybluedev.whisker
This should install the package as the hungrybluedev.whisker
module.
To use it, use import hungrybluedev.whisker
and proceed as normal.
Run the following to install whisker from GitHub using V's package manager:
v install --git https://github.com/hungrybluedev/whisker
This should install in hungrybluedev.whisker
first and then relocate it
to whisker
. Now, in your project, you can import whisker
and use whisker
right away!
The main struct is whisker.template.Template
which can be generated either
directly from template strings or be loaded from disk from template files. A
single template should be reused for different data models to produce outputs
which differ in content but not semantic structure.
Note There might be slight white-space consistencies between the generated and expected results. For machine-verification, it is recommended to compare the parsed and reconstructed outputs for your particular file format.
- Load a template:
Use
template.from_strings(input: input_str, partials: partial_map)
to generate a template from direct string inputs. Here,input_str
is astring
andpartial_map
is amap[string]string
. The map's keys are the names of the template that are replaced by the direct template strings. Leave the partials field empty if there are none required. - Run with Data Model: Use
run(data)
to generate the output string. The data can be represented in V source code directly (refer to the spec for examples), or it can be loaded from JSON (usingdatamodel.from_json(data_string)
).
This is a copy-paste-able example to get started immediately:
module main
// Imports if you install from GitHub:
import whisker.datamodel
import whisker.template
// Imports if you install from VPM:
import hungrybluedev.whisker.template
import hungrybluedev.whisker.datamodel
fn main() {
simple_template := template.from_strings(input: 'Hello, {{name}}!')!
data := datamodel.from_json('{"name": "World"}')!
println(simple_template.run(data)!) // prints "Hello, World!"
}
- Load a template:
Use
template.load_file(input: input_str, partials: partial_map)
to generate a template from file names. The difference here is that instead of providing content, you provide the relative file paths. The names of the partials need to be exact though, so keep an eye on that. - Run with Data Model: Same as before. You can
use
os.read_file(path_to_json)
to read the JSON contents and then plug this into thedatamodel.from_json
function.
It is not necessary, but it is recommended to use filenames that
contain *.wskr.*
somewhere in the file name.
Check json_test.v and html_test.v for
examples with template files.
whisker may also be used as a standalone command-line program to process template files. It does not support direct template string input for the sake of simplicity.
Build whisker
with v cmd/whisker
and run cmd/whisker/whisker --help
for
usage instructions. You can specify a bin
subdirectory as output folder and
add it to path as well:
# Create an output directory
mkdir cmd/bin
# Build the executable
v cmd/whisker -o cmd/bin/whisker
# Run the executable
cmd/bin/whisker --help
Check whisker_cli_test.v for a concrete demonstration.
Sample text
Sample text
Hello, {{name}}!
{
"name": "world"
}
Hello, world!
{{=[ ]=}}
module main
fn main() {
println('[greeting]')
}
{
"greeting": "Have a nice day!"
}
module main
fn main() {
println('Have a nice day!')
}
<nav>
<ul>
<li>Home</li>
<li>About</li>
{{-logged_in}}
<li>Log In</li>
{{/logged_in}} {{+logged_in}}
<li>Account: {{user.name}}</li>
{{/logged_in}}
</ul>
</nav>
{
"logged_in": false
}
<nav>
<ul>
<li>Home</li>
<li>About</li>
<li>Log In</li>
</ul>
</nav>
{
"logged_in": true,
"user": {
"name": "whisker"
}
}
<nav>
<ul>
<li>Home</li>
<li>About</li>
<li>Account: whisker</li>
</ul>
</nav>
Positive and negative sections also apply to lists and maps. An empty list or map means a negative section and a non-empty one represents a positive section.
List:
{{+vacation}}
<h1>Currently on vacation</h1>
<ul>
{{*.}}
<li>{{.}}</li>
{{/.}}
</ul>
{{/vacation}} {{-vacation}}
<p>Nobody is on vacation currently</p>
{{/vacation}}
{
"vacation": []
}
<p>Nobody is on vacation currently</p>
{
"vacation": ["Homer", "Marge"]
}
<h1>Currently on vacation</h1>
<ul>
<li>Homer</li>
<li>Marge</li>
</ul>
Map:
{{+user}}
<p>Welcome {{last_name}}, {{first_name}}</h1>
{{/user}}
{{-user}}
<p>Create account?</p>
{{/user}}
{
"user": {}
}
<p>Create account?</p>
{
"user": {
"last_name": "Simpson",
"first_name": "Homer"
}
}
<p>Welcome Simpson, Homer</h1>
Map Iteration:
<ul>
{{*user}}
<li>{{key}}: {{value}}</li>
{{/user}}
</ul>
{
"user": {
"First Name": "Homer",
"Last Name": "Simpson"
}
}
<ul>
<li>First Name: Homer</li>
<li>Last Name: Simpson</li>
</ul>
<ol>
{{*items}} {{>item}} {{/items}}
</ol>
<li>{{name}}: {{description}}</li>
{
"items": [
{
"name": "Banana",
"description": "Rich in potassium and naturally sweet."
},
{
"name": "Orange",
"description": "High in Vitamin C and very refreshing."
}
]
}
<ol>
<li>Banana: Rich in potassium and naturally sweet.</li>
<li>Orange: High in Vitamin C and very refreshing.</li>
</ol>
All the examples shown here are tested in CI in the readme_test.v file.
For the full specification, refer to the unit tests and test cases in
the spec
directory.
This project is distributed under the MIT License.
Thanks to the original Mustache project for inspiration and the specification.