A template language grammar inspired by the Python code aesthetic
Project description
A python-inspired templating language.
DEMO
import app.url import request from plywood.plugin import compress doctype(5) # or doctype('strict') doctype('xhtml'), etc. html: # this'll start looking a lot like jade, but with quotes and colons # even though 'html' is a function call, the parentheses are optional. head: meta(charset="utf-8") title: if self.title: # context variables are available on 'self' # docstrings are stripped of preceding whitespace and the first and # last newline is removed. """ {{self.title}} | """ # string interpolation uses plywood in 'inline' mode. Each line # will be joined with a space. 'Welcome' # string literals require quotes compress('css'): # passing values to tag attributes are escaped (html-entitized) automatically # if you want to escape using xml, pass {'format': 'xml'} in your options. link(rel='stylesheet', type='text/css', href=url.static('css/reset.css')) link(rel='stylesheet', type='text/css', href=url.static('css/welcome.css')) script(src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.1/jquery.min.js", type="text/javascript") compress('js'): script(src=url.static("js/underscore.js"), type="text/javascript") script(src=url.static("js/backbone.js"), type="text/javascript") ieif 'lt IE 9': script(src="//html5shiv.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/html5.js", type="text/javascript") link(rel='stylesheet', type='text/css', href=url.static('css/ie.css')) # blocks? block inheritance? of course! block('extra_head') body: div(class="wrapper", id="main-header"): # for xml usage, the token parsing will accept some gnarly-looking elements in # argument lists, and this uses the html-plugin constructor, so that # you don't have to create a bunch of plugins for your XML documents. # (you still need commas between arguments) <book xmlns='urn:loc.gov:books', xmlns:isbn='urn:ISBN:0-395-36341-6'>: <isbn:number>: 1568491379 header: block('header'): # inlining is easy p(class="logo"): 'logo' # more complicated inlining p: a(href=url.reverse("login")): 'Login' block('header_title'): if self.user: 'Welcome, '{self.user.name}' else: 'Welcome' if not self.user: p(class="login"): a(href=url.reverse("login")): 'Log In' a(href=url.reverse("logout")): 'Log Out' nav: ul: block('nav'): section(class="breadcrumb"): block('breadcrumb') section(class="main"): block('messages'): if messages: ul(class="messages"): for message in self.messages: li(class=message.tags): message script: # code literals, so that savvy editors can color the source code '''javascript $(document).ready(function(){ $("ul.messages").addClass("animate"); var fade_out = _(function() { this.addClass("fade-out") }).bind($("ul.messages")) setTimeout(fade_out, 5000); $("ul.messages").bind("click", fade_out); }); ''' block('content') footer: p: '©{now(%Y)} colinta'
INSTALLATION
$ pip install plywood $ ply < in.ply > out.html
RUNTIME
When you run a plywood template, a lot of the work is done using plugins, which are loaded into the global context - the PlywoodEnv object. This only needs to happen once per application - the PlywoodEnv can be reused by any number of templates (though it is not thread safe - that will be remedied soon).
When you actually run a compiled Plywood object, you can pass in a dict of values that you want
WHY!?!?
The main reason: I envisioned an HTML templating language that had python-like syntax, and the options that are out there now (Haml, Coffekup, Jade) don’t hit the mark.
Plain-Jane HTML? Sure, if you want. That is, I think, the best alternative to plywood! For that, use Jinja2.
The template languages that take an HTML-agnostic view (jinja2, django) is HTML made nastier by inserting additional markup. I looked at Jade and Haml as “yeah, you’re getting there”, but they didn’t nail it. Plus, have you tried writing extensions for those systems? Ooof. Nasty stuff. Writing a plugin for plywood is much easier, and since you can take some part in the parsing and runtime process, you can write some pretty hefty plugins!
I’m unapologettically a DIY-er. I think that sometimes wheels just need re-inventing!
LICENSE
- Author:
Colin Thomas-Arnold
- Copyright:
2012 Colin Thomas-Arnold <http://colinta.com/>
Copyright (c) 2012, Colin Thomas-Arnold All rights reserved.
See LICENSE for more details (it’s a simplified BSD license).
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