Simple, fast and flexible HTML templating engine for Yii2 PHP framework with zero configuration. Supports basic control structures (IF, FOR, SET), importing subtemplates (IMPORT), piped and dynamic directives, active record (AR) relations and deep nested arrays. It is similar to Twig or Blade, however with less overhead, no dependencies and without advanced features.
It can be used to render e.g. an invoice from HTML markup, edited in a WYSIWYG editor and turned into PDF or MS Word file - see example bellow.
Generic version without framework dependency can be found at lubosdz/html-templating-engine.
$ composer require "lubosdz/yii2-template-engine"
or via composer.json
:
"require": {
...
"lubosdz/yii2-template-engine": "^1.0",
...
},
Initiate template engine inside Yii application:
use lubosdz\yii2\TemplateEngine;
$engine = new TemplateEngine();
or register as a component in app/config/main.php
:
...
'components' => [
'engine' => [
'class' => 'lubosdz\yii2\TemplateEngine',
]
]
...
$engine = Yii::$app->template;
Use method $engine->render($html [, $values])
to generate HTML output:
- $html = source HTML markup with placeholders like
<h1>{{ processMe }}</h1>
. This argument can be also path alias starting with@
to load existing HTML file, such as@app/templates/invoice.html
- $values = array of values like pairs
[processMe => value]
to be injected into or evaluated inside placeholders
Once output generated, it can be e.g. supplied to PDF or MS Word renderer to produce a PDF or MS Word file respectively.
Templating engine collects all placeholders
within supplied HTML markup and attempts to replace them with matching $values
or evaluate as control structure.
Placeholders that have not been processed are left untouched by default. This behaviour is suitable for development.
In production, setting $engine->setForceReplace(true)
can be set to replace unprocessed placeholders with empty string.
$html = 'Hello <b>{{ who }}</b>!';
$values = ['who' => 'world'];
echo $engine->render($html, $values);
// output: "Hello <b>world</b>!"
Template engine comes with couple of generally usable methods for basic date,
time and string manipulation - directives
. These can be referenced directly
inside supplied HTML markup. Directives use the pipe operator |
to chain
operations within the placeholder.
$html = $engine->render('Generated on {{ today }} at {{ time }}.');
// output - respecting EN locale: "Generated on Dec 31, 2021 at 11:59pm."
// output - respecting SK/CS locale: "Generated on 31. 12. 2021 at 23:59."
echo $engine->render('Meet me at {{ now(7200) | time }}.');
// output example, if now is 8:30am: "Meet me at 10:30am." (shift +2 hours = 7200 secs)
echo $engine->render('My name is {{ user.name | escape }}.', ['user' => [
'name' => '<John>',
]]);
// filtered output: "My name is <John>."
echo $engine->render('Hello {{ user.name | truncate(5) | e }}.', ['user' => [
'name' => '<John>',
]]);
// truncated and filtered output: "Hello <John...."
Specific for the Yii 2 framework, object properties as well as related models are automatically collected, if referenced inside placeholders.
$html = $engine->render('Hello {{ customer.name }}.', [
'customer' => Customer::findOne($id), // find active record
]);
// output e.g.: "Hello John Doe."
$html = $engine->render('Address is {{ customer.address.city }} {{ customer.address.zip }}.', [
'customer' => Customer::findOne($id), // Customer has defined relation to object `Address`
]);
// output e.g.: "Address is Prague 10000."
Other built-in directives:
// trim - standard PHP trim function
$html = $engine->render('Hello {{ username | trim }} ', [
'username' => ' John Doe! ',
]);
// output "Hello John Doe!"
$html = $engine->render('Hello {{ username | trim(" !eo") }}', [
'username' => ' John Doe! ',
]);
// output "Hello John D"
// replace - match simple string or regular expression (REGEX)
$html = $engine->render('HELLO {{ name | replace (BADBOY, GOODBOY) }}!', [
'name' => 'BADBOY'
]);
// output "HELLO GOODBOY"
// nl2br - new lines to brackets
$html = $engine->render('NOTES: {{ notes_textarea | nl2br }}', [
'notes_textarea' => "first line ...\nsecond line\n- last line -"
]);
// output:
"NOTES: first line ...
<br>second line
<br>- last line -
"
// concatenation - joining strings
$html = $engine->render('Order #{{ order_id | concat("by user"; " - ") | concat(customer.name) }}', [
'order_id' => "123",
'customer' => [
'name' => 'John Doe',
],
]);
// output "Order #123 by customer - John Doe"
Dynamic directives allow binding custom anonymous functions to placeholders. They can be added at a runtime in 2 steps and greatly extend flexibility of the engine.
- define directive ie.
$engine->setDirective(directiveName, function($arg){ ... })
- call directive inside the placeholder ie.
{{ user.name | directiveName($arg) }}
In the following example we will attach dynamic directive named coloredText
and render output with custom inline CSS:
// attach dynamic directive (anonymous function) accepting 2 arguments
$engine->setDirective('coloredText', function($text, $color){
return "<span style='color: {$color}'>{$text}</span>";
});
// process template - we can set different color in each call
echo $engine->render("This is {{ output | coloredText(yellow) }}", [
'output' => 'colored text',
]);
// output: "This is <span style='color: yellow'>colored text</span>"
Note: The first argument passed into dynamic directive ($text
in the example above)
is always the value from previous piped operation.
Control structure IF .. ELSEIF .. ELSE .. ENDIF
is supported:
$templateHtml = "
{{ if countOrders > 0 }}
<h3>Thank you!</h3>
{{ else }}
<h3>Sure you want to leave?</h3>
{{ endif }}
";
$values = [
'countOrders' => count(Customer::findOne($id)->orders); // e.g. 3
];
echo $engine->render($templateHtml, $values);
// output e.g.: "<h3>Thank you!</h3>" - if some order found
Structure FOR ... ELSEFOR .. ENDFOR
will create loop:
$templateHtml = "
<table>
{{ for item in items }}
{{ SET subtotal = item.qty * item.price * (100 + item.vat) / 100 }}
<tr>
<td>#{{ loop.index }}</td>
<td>{{ item.description }}</td>
<td>{{ item.qty }}</td>
<td>{{ item.price | round(2) }}</td>
<td>{{ item.vat | round(2) }}%</td>
<td>{{ subtotal | round(2) }} €</td>
</tr>
{{ SET total = total + subtotal }}
{{ endfor }}
</table>
<p>Amount due: <b> {{ total | round(2) }} Eur</b></p>
";
$values = [
'items' => [
['description' => 'Item one', 'qty' => 1, 'price' => 1, 'vat' => 10],
['description' => 'Item two', 'qty' => 2, 'price' => 2, 'vat' => 20],
['description' => 'Item three', 'qty' => 3, 'price' => 3, 'vat' => 30],
['description' => 'Item four', 'qty' => 4, 'price' => 4, 'vat' => 40],
]
];
$html = $engine->render($templateHtml, $values);
// outputs valid HTML table with items e.g.: "<table><tr><td>#1</td><td> ..."
Following auxiliary variables are accessible inside each loop:
loop.index
.. (int) 1-based iteration counterloop.index0
.. (int) 0-based iteration counterloop.length
.. (int) total number of items/iterationsloop.first
.. (bool) true on first iterationloop.last
.. (bool) true on last iteration
Allows manipulating local template variables, such as count totals:
{{ SET subtotal = item.qty * item.price * (100 + item.vat) / 100 }}
{{ SET total = total + subtotal }}
See also example under FOR
.
Note: shorthand syntax +=
e.g. SET total += subtotal
is NOT supported.
Allows importing another templates (subtemplates).
Importing of subtemplates from within subtemplates is supported too.
For security reasons imported subtemplate(s) must reside inside the template directory
(e.g. ../templates/header.html
) or subdirectory (e.g. ../templates/invoice/header.html
).
This allows effective structuring and maintaing template sets.
Attempt to load a template from outside of the template directory will throw an error.
First, set the template directory either explicitly or via loading template by alias:
// set the template directory root explicitly
$engine->setDirTemplates('/abs/path/to/templates');
// template directory will be set implicitly as the parent of `invoice.html`
// note: engine's method "render()" supports Yii's aliases, so if supplied string
// starts with ampersand `@` it is assuming template absolute path
$htmlInvoice = $engine->render('@templates/invoice.html');
Then in processed template add the import
command:
<h3>Invoice No. 20230123</h3>
{{ import invoice_header.html }}
{{ import invoice_body.html }}
{{ import _partial/version_2/invoice_footer.html }}
<p>Generated on ...</p>
Templating engine comes with most typical pre-configured settings. In many cases it may be useful to change default behaviour. The engine allows changing:
- argument separator in directives
- enabling / disabling logging of errors
- configuring replacement for empty or unprocessed placeholders
The engine uses by default semicolon ;
which is less common and less prone to conflict with supplied texts.
It can be changed to more typical comma ,
by setting:
$engine->setArgSeparator(",");
// then use it also in placeholders and directives
$engine->render("{{ user | truncate(5, '..') }}", ["user" => "John Doe"]);
Please note the the engine will ignore placeholders for which parsing fails. See also test for detailed behaviour.
By default the engine logs errors into system logs. Typically, these may be ie. unprocessed placeholders (meaning no value supplied) or failed parsing of placeholders. It is highly recommended to enable this logging during development. However, in production it may be more desired to turn it off by setting:
$engine->setLogErrors(false);
By default the engine does not replace any unprocessed or empty placeholders. This allows quick discovering the issues in templates during development. By defining replacement as a string we can force the engine to insert such a string into the output for all empty or unprocessed placeholders. Following are typical and valid replacement alternatives:
// default - do not process any empty placeholders
// generated map will set for missed placeholders NULL
$engine->setForceReplace(false);
// yes, replace empty placeholders with empty string
$engine->setForceReplace(true);
$engine->setForceReplace("");
// yes, replace empty placeholders with 5 dots
$engine->setForceReplace(".....");
// yes, replace empty placeholders with HTML entity to retain spacing
$engine->setForceReplace(" ");
After processing whole template it may be usefull to store some processed data. Typically we may want to re-populate template with same values in the future and store current data into the database. The engine allows reading generated resources.
list($map, $placeholders, $values, $html) = $engine->getResources();
This will return all data necessary for reconstructing the template:
$map
.. array of pairsplaceholder
=>processed value
$placeholders
.. array of pairsplaceholder
=>directive
$values
.. array of supplied parameters$html
.. string raw HTML before processing
Rendering engine allows user to safely change output without any programming knowledge. To add an extra value, we can also turn rendered HTML output into professionally looking PDF or MS Word file:
// first process HTML template and input values
$htmlOutput = $engine->render($htmlMarkup, $values);
// then generate PDF file:
$pdf = new \TCPDF();
$pdf->writeHTML($htmlOutput);
$path = $pdf->Output('/save/path/my-invoice.pdf');
// or generate MS Word file:
$word = new \PhpOffice\PhpWord\PhpWord();
$section = $word->addSection();
\PhpOffice\PhpWord\Shared\Html::addHtml($section, $htmlOutput);
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpWord\IOFactory::createWriter($word, 'Word2007');
$writer->save('/save/path/my-invoice.docx');
- run
phpunit
in the root directory
- see
tests/TemplateEngineTest.php
for more examples - Running tests via phpunit on NuSphere's PhpEd in debug mode:
use
-d
parameter to inject debugging arguments, e.g.> phpunit -d [email protected]:7869 %*
- Adding functionality - simply extend
TemplateEngine
class:
class MyRenderer extends \lubosdz\yii2\TemplateEngine
{
// your code, custom directives, override parent methods ..
}
- exclude partially parsed placeholders from expression translator
- refactored ELSEFOR behaviour - the condition will apply if no items to loop through
- improved parsing REGEX expressions for more precise match
- translation of placeholder keys now uses REGEX boundary
\b
to avoid naming conflicts - added build-in directive
replace
e.g. " {{ name | replace(WHAT, REPLACE) }} " - support for atomic booleans in
IF
condition eg. {{ if cars }} ... {{ endif }} - added test + improved documentation
- fix eval error for numeric values starting with zero (should cast to string)
- support importing subtemplates via
{{ import file }}
- fix converting formatted number to a valid PHP number in directive
dir_round
- support configurable argument separator (beside default semicolon ";")
- resolve deep-tree argument key conflicts
- added built-in directive concat, trim
- added tests, improved documentation, typehints
- support PHP 8.2
- properly detect valid Datetime string in built-in directive
- forceReplace now takes beside boolean also string as a replacement value
- fixed bug - lookup lowercased AR model
- fixed the IF-test
- improved documentation
- added support for loading HTML via path alias, e.g.
$engine->render('@app/templates/invoice.html', $data)
- minor documentation improvements
- fix compatability for PHP 8.1
- fix tests for PHP 7.0 - 8.0
- improved documentation
- initial release