FastTemplate(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation FastTemplate(3)NAMECGI::FastTemplate - Perl extension for managing templates, and
performing variable interpolation.
SYNOPSIS
use CGI::FastTemplate;
$tpl = new CGI::FastTemplate();
$tpl = new CGI::FastTemplate("/path/to/templates");
CGI::FastTemplate->set_root("/path/to/templates"); ## all instances will use this path
$tpl->set_root("/path/to/templates"); ## this instance will use this path
$tpl->define( main => "main.tpl",
row => "table_row.tpl",
all => "table_all.tpl",
);
$tpl->assign(TITLE => "I am the title.");
my %defaults = ( FONT => "<font size=+2 face=helvetica>",
EMAIL => 'jmoore@sober.com',
);
$tpl->assign(\%defaults);
$tpl->parse(ROWS => ".row"); ## the '.' appends to ROWS
$tpl->parse(CONTENT => ["row", "all"]);
$tpl->parse(CONTENT => "main");
$tpl->print(); ## defaults to last parsed
$tpl->print("CONTENT"); ## same as print() as "CONTENT" was last parsed
$ref = $tpl->fetch("CONTENT");
DESCRIPTION
What is a template?
A template is a text file with variables in it. When a template is
parsed, the variables are interpolated to text. (The text can be a few
bytes or a few hundred kilobytes.) Here is a simple template with one
variable ('$NAME'):
Hello $NAME. How are you?
When are templates useful?
Templates are very useful for CGI programming, because adding HTML to
your perl code clutters your code and forces you to do any HTML
modifications. By putting all of your HTML in separate template files,
you can let a graphic or interface designer change the look of your
application without having to bug you, or let them muck around in your
perl code.
There are other templating modules on CPAN, what makes FastTemplate
different?
CGI::FastTemplate has the following attributes:
Speed
FastTemplate doesn't use eval, and parses with a single regular
expression. It just does simple variable interpolation (i.e. there is
no logic that you can add to templates - you keep the logic in the
code). That's why it's has 'Fast' in it's name!
Efficiency
FastTemplate functions accept and return references whenever possible,
which saves needless copying of arguments (hashes, scalars, etc).
Flexibility
The API is robust and flexible, and allows you to build very complex
HTML documents or HTML interfaces. It is 100% perl and works on Unix
or NT. Also, it isn't restricted to building HTML documents -- it
could be used to build any ascii based document (e.g. postscript, XML,
email).
The similar modules on CPAN are:
Module HTML::Template (S/SA/SAMTREGAR/HTML-Template-0.04.tar.gz)
Module Taco::Template (KWILLIAMS/Taco-0.04.tar.gz)
Module Text::BasicTemplate (D/DC/DCARRAWAY/Text-BasicTemplate-0.9.8.tar.gz)
Module Text::Template (MJD/Text-Template-1.20.tar.gz)
Module HTML::Mason (J/JS/JSWARTZ/HTML-Mason-0.5.1.tar.gz)
What are the steps to use FastTemplate?
The main steps are:
1. define
2. assign
3. parse
4. print
These are outlined in detail in CORE METHODS below.
CORE METHODSdefine(HASH)
The method define() maps a template filename to a (usually shorter)
name. e.g.
my $tpl = new FastTemplate();
$tpl->define( main => "main.tpl",
footer => "footer.tpl",
);
This new name is the name that you will use to refer to the templates.
Filenames should not appear in any place other than a define().
(Note: This is a required step! This may seem like an annoying extra
step when you are dealing with a trivial example like the one above,
but when you are dealing with dozens of templates, it is very handy to
refer to templates with names that are indepandant of filenames.)
TIP: Since define() does not actually load the templates, it is faster
and more legible to define all the templates with one call to define().
define_nofile(HASH) alias: define_raw(HASH)
Sometimes it is desireable to not have to create a separate template
file for each template (though in the long run it is usually better to
do so). The method define_nofile() allows you to do this. For
example, if you were writing a news tool where you wanted to bold an
item if it was "new" you could do something like the following:
my $tpl = new FastTemplate();
$tpl->define_nofile( new => '<b>$ITEM_NAME</b> <BR>',
old => '$ITEM_NAME <BR>');
if ($new)
{
$tpl->parse($ITEM => "new");
}
else
{
$tpl->parse($ITEM => "old");
}
Of course, now you, the programmer has to update how new items are
displayed, whereas if it was in a template, you could offload that task
to someone else.
define_nofile(HASH REF) alias: define_raw(HASH REF)
A more efficient way of passing your arguments than using a real hash.
Just pass in a hash reference instead of a real hash.
assign(HASH)
The method assign() assigns values for variables. In order for a
variable in a template to be interpolated it must be assigned. There
are two forms which have some important differences. The simple form,
is to accept a hash and copy all the key/value pairs into a hash in
FastTemplate. There is only one hash in FastTemplate, so assigning a
value for the same key will overwrite that key.
e.g.
$tpl->assign(TITLE => "king kong");
$tpl->assign(TITLE => "godzilla"); ## overwrites "king kong"
assign(HASH REF)
A much more efficient way to pass in values is to pass in a hash
reference. (This is particularly nice if you get back a hash or hash
reference from a database query.) Passing a hash reference doesn't
copy the data, but simply keeps the reference in an array. During
parsing if the value for a variable cannot be found in the main
FastTemplate hash, it starts to look through the array of hash
references for the value. As soon as it finds the value it stops. It
is important to remember to remove hash references when they are no
longer needed.
e.g.
my %foo = ("TITLE" => "king kong");
my %bar = ("TITLE" => "godzilla");
$tpl->assign(\%foo); ## TITLE resolves to "king kong"
$tpl->clear_href(1); ## remove last hash ref assignment (\%foo)
$tpl->assign(\%bar); ## TITLE resolves to "godzilla"
$tpl->clear_href(); ## remove all hash ref assignments
$tpl->assign(\%foo); ## TITLE resolves to "king kong"
$tpl->assign(\%bar); ## TITLE _still_ resolves to "king kong"
parse(HASH)
The parse function is the main function in FastTemplate. It accepts a
hash, where the keys are the TARGET and the values are the SOURCE
templates. There are three forms the hash can be in:
$tpl->parse(MAIN => "main"); ## regular
$tpl->parse(MAIN => ["table", "main"]); ## compound
$tpl->parse(MAIN => ".row"); ## append
In the regular version, the template named "main" is loaded if it
hasn't been already, all the variables are interpolated, and the result
is then stored in FastTemplate as the value MAIN. If the variable
'$MAIN' shows up in a later template, it will be interpolated to be the
value of the parsed "main" template. This allows you to easily nest
templates, which brings us to the compound style.
The compound style is designed to make it easier to nest templates.
The following are equivalent:
$tpl->parse(MAIN => "table");
$tpl->parse(MAIN => "main");
## is the same as:
$tpl->parse(MAIN => ["table", "main"]); ## this form saves function calls
## (and makes your code cleaner)
It is important to note that when you are using the compound form, each
template after the first, must contain the variable that you are
parsing the results into. In the above example, 'main' must contain
the variable '$MAIN', as that is where the parsed results of 'table' is
stored. If 'main' does not contain the variable '$MAIN' then the
parsed results of 'table' will be lost.
The append style is a bit of a kludge, but it allows you to append the
parsed results to the target variable. This is most useful when
building tables that have an dynamic number of rows - such as data from
a database query.
strict()
When strict() is on (it is on by default) all variables found during
template parsing that are unresolved have a warning printed to STDERR.
e.g.
[CGI::FastTemplate] Warning: no value found for variable: SOME_VARIABLE
Also, new as of version 1.04 the variables will be left in the output
document. This was done for two reasons: to allow for parsing to be
done in stages (i.e. multiple passes), and to make it easier to
identify undefined variables since they appear in the parsed output.
If you have been using an earlier version of FastTemplate and you want
the old behavior of replacing unknown variables with an empty string,
see: no_strict().
Note: version 1.07 adds support for two styles of variables, so that
the following are equivalent: $VAR and ${VAR} However, when using
strict(), variables with curly brackets that are not resolved are
outputted as plain variables. e.g. if ${VAR} has no value assigned to
it, it would appear in the output as $VAR. This is a slight
inconsistency -- ideally the unresolved variable would remain
unchanged.
Note: STDERR output should be captured and logged by the webserver so
you can just tail the error log to see the output.
e.g.
tail -f /etc/httpd/logs/error_log
no_strict()
Turns off warning messages about unresolved template variables. As of
version 1.04 a call to no_strict() is required to replace unknown
variables with an empty string. By default, all instances of
FastTemplate behave as is strict() was called. Also, no_strict() must
be set for each instance of CGI::FastTemplate. e.g.
CGI::FastTemplate::no_strict; ## no
my $tpl = CGI::FastTemplate;
$tpl->no_strict; ## yes
print(SCALAR)
The method print() prints the contents of the named variable. If no
variable is given, then it prints the last variable that was used in a
call to parse which I find is a reasonable default.
e.g.
$tpl->parse(MAIN => "main");
$tpl->print(); ## prints value of MAIN
$tpl->print("MAIN"); ## same
This method is provided for convenience.
If you need to print other than STDOUT (e.g. socket, file handle) see
fetch().
OTHER METHODSfetch(SCALAR)
Returns a scalar reference to parsed data.
$tpl->parse(CONTENT => "main");
my $content = $tpl->fetch("CONTENT");
print $$content; ## print to STDOUT
print FILE $$content; ## print to filehandle or pipe
clear()
Note: All of 'clear' functions are for use under mod_perl (or anywhere
where your scripts are persistant). They generally aren't needed if
you are writing CGI scripts.
Clears the internal hash that stores data passed from calls to assign()
and parse().
Often clear() is at the end of a mod_perl script:
$tpl->print();
$tpl->clear();
clear(ARRAY)
With no arguments, all assigned or parsed variables are cleared, but if
passed an ARRAY of variable names, then only those variables will be
cleared.
e.g.
$tpl->assign(TITLE => "Welcome");
$tpl->clear("TITLE"); ## title is now empty
Another way of achieving the same effect of clearnign variables is to
just assign an empty string.
e.g.
$tpl->assign(TITLE => ''); ## same as: $tpl->clear("TITLE");
clear_parse()
See: clear()clear_href(NUMBER)
Removes a given number of hash references from the list of hash refs
that is built using:
$tpl->assign(HASH REF);
If called with no arguments, it removes all hash references from the
array. This is often used for database queries where each row from the
query is a hash or hash reference.
e.g.
while($hash_row = $sth->fetchrow_hashref)
{
$tpl->assign($hash_row);
$tpl->parse(ROW => ".row");
$tpl->clear_href(1);
}
clear_define()
Clears the internal hash that stores data passed to:
$tpl->define();
Note: The hash that holds the loaded templates is not touched with this
method. See: clear_tpl
clear_tpl()clear_tpl(NAME)
The first time a template is used, it is loaded and stored in a hash in
memory. clear_tpl() removes all the templates being held in memory.
clear_tpl(NAME) only removes the one with NAME. This is generally not
required for normal CGI programming, but if you have long running
scripts (e.g. mod_perl) and have very large templates that a re
infrequently used gives you some control over how memory is being used.
clear_all()
Cleans the module of any data, except for the ROOT directory.
Equivalent to:
$tpl->clear_define();
$tpl->clear_href();
$tpl->clear_tpl();
$tpl->clear_parse();
Variables
A variable is defined as:
$[A-Z0-9][A-Z0-9_]+
This means, that a variable must begin with a dollar sign '$'. The
second character must be an uppercase letter or digit 'A-Z0-9'.
Remaining characters can include an underscore.
As of version 1.07 variables can also be delimited by curly brackets.
${[A-Z0-9][A-Z0-9_]+}
For example, the following are valid variables:
$FOO
$F123F
$TOP_OF_PAGE
${NEW_STYLE}
Variable Interpolation (Template Parsing)
When the a template is being scanned for variables, pattern matching is
greedy. (For more info on "greediness" of regexps see perlre.) This is
important, because if there are valid variable characters after your
variable, FastTemplate will consider them to be part of the variable.
As of version 1.07 you can use curly brackets as delimiters for your
variable names. e.g. ${VARIABLE} You do not need to use curly
brackets if the character immediately after your variable name is not
an uppercase letter, digit or underscore. ['A-Z0-9_']
If a variable cannot be resolved to a value then there are two
possibilities. If strict() has been called (it is on by default) then
the variable remains and a warning is printed to STDERR. If
no_strict() has been called then the variables is converted to an empty
string [''].
See strict() and no_strict() for more info.
Some examples will make this clearer.
Assume:
$FOO = "foo";
$BAR = "bar";
$ONE = "1";
$TWO = "2";
$UND = "_";
Variable Interpolated/Parsed
------------------------------------------------
$FOO foo
$FOO-$BAR foo-bar
$ONE_$TWO 2 ## $ONE_ is undefined!
$ONE_$TWO $ONE_2 ## assume: strict()
$ONE$UND$TWO 1_2 ## kludge!
${ONE}_$TWO 1_2 ## much better
$$FOO $foo
$25,000 $25,000
FULL EXAMPLE
This example will build an HTML page that will consist of a table. The
table will have 3 numbered rows. The first step is to decide what
templates we need. In order to make it easy for the table to change to
a different number of rows, we will have a template for the rows of the
table, another for the table, and a third for the head/body part of the
HTML page.
Below are the templates. (Pretend each one is in a separate file.)
<!-- NAME: main.tpl -->
<html>
<head><title>$TITLE</title>
</head>
<body>
$MAIN
</body>
</html>
<!-- END: main.tpl -->
<!-- NAME: table.tpl -->
<table>
$ROWS
</table>
<!-- END: table.tpl -->
<!-- NAME: row.tpl -->
<tr>
<td>$NUMBER</td>
<td>$BIG_NUMBER</td>
</tr>
<!-- END: row.tpl -->
Now we can start coding...
## START ##
use CGI::FastTemplate;
my $tpl = new CGI::FastTemplate("/path/to/template/files");
$tpl->define( main => "main.tpl",
table => "table.tpl",
row => "row.tpl",
);
$tpl->assign(TITLE => "FastTemplate Test");
for $n (1..3)
{
$tpl->assign( NUMBER => $n,
BIG_NUMBER => $n*10);
$tpl->parse(ROWS => ".row");
}
$tpl->parse(MAIN => ["table", "main"]);
$tpl->print();
## END ##
When run it returns:
<!-- NAME: main.tpl -->
<html>
<head><title>FastTemplate Test</title>
</head>
<body>
<!-- NAME: table.tpl -->
<table>
<!-- NAME: row.tpl -->
<tr>
<td>1</td>
<td>10</td>
</tr>
<!-- END: row.tpl -->
<!-- NAME: row.tpl -->
<tr>
<td>2</td>
<td>20</td>
</tr>
<!-- END: row.tpl -->
<!-- NAME: row.tpl -->
<tr>
<td>3</td>
<td>30</td>
</tr>
<!-- END: row.tpl -->
</table>
<!-- END: table.tpl -->
</body>
</html>
<!-- END: main.tpl -->
If you're thinking you could have done the same thing in a few lines of
plain perl, well yes you probably could. But, how would a graphic
designer tweak the resulting HTML? How would you have a designer
editing the HTML while you're editing another part of the code? How
would you save the output to a file, or pipe it to another application
(e.g. sendmail)? How would you make your application multi-lingual?
How would you build an application that has options for high graphics,
or text-only? FastTemplate really starts to shine when you are
building mid to large scale web applications, simply because it begins
to separate the application's generic logic from the specific
implementation.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1998-99 Jason Moore <jmoore@sober.com>. All rights
reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
Artistic License for more details.
AUTHOR
Jason Moore <jmoore@sober.com>
SEE ALSOmod_perl(1).
perl v5.14.0 1999-06-28 FastTemplate(3)