plush

The powerful template system that Go needs

Github星跟踪图

Plush Build Status GoDoc

Plush is the templating system that Go both needs and deserves. Powerful, flexible, and extendable, Plush is there to make writing your templates that much easier.

Introduction Video

Installation

$ go get -u github.com/gobuffalo/plush

Usage

Plush allows for the embedding of dynamic code inside of your templates. Take the following example:

<!-- input -->
<p><%= "plush is great" %></p>

<!-- output -->
<p>plush is great</p>

Controlling Output

By using the <%= %> tags we tell Plush to dynamically render the inner content, in this case the string plush is great, into the template between the <p></p> tags.

If we were to change the example to use <% %> tags instead the inner content will be evaluated and executed, but not injected into the template:

<!-- input -->
<p><% "plush is great" %></p>

<!-- output -->
<p></p>

By using the <% %> tags we can create variables (and functions!) inside of templates to use later:

<!-- does not print output -->
<%
let h = {name: "mark"}
let greet = fn(n) {
  return "hi " + n
}
%>
<!-- prints output -->
<h1><%= greet(h["name"]) %></h1>

Full Example:

html := `<html>
<%= if (names && len(names) > 0) { %>
	<ul>
		<%= for (n) in names { %>
			<li><%= capitalize(n) %></li>
		<% } %>
	</ul>
<% } else { %>
	<h1>Sorry, no names. :(</h1>
<% } %>
</html>`

ctx := plush.NewContext()
ctx.Set("names", []string{"john", "paul", "george", "ringo"})

s, err := plush.Render(html, ctx)
if err != nil {
  log.Fatal(err)
}

fmt.Print(s)
// output: <html>
// <ul>
// 		<li>John</li>
// 		<li>Paul</li>
// 		<li>George</li>
// 		<li>Ringo</li>
// 		</ul>
// </html>

Comments

You can add comments like this:

<%# This is a comment %>

If/Else Statements

The basic syntax of if/else if/else statements is as follows:

<%
if (true) {
  # do something
} else if (false) {
  # do something
} else {
  # do something else
}
%>

When using if/else statements to control output, remember to use the <%= %> tag to output the result of the statement:

<%= if (true) { %>
  <!-- some html here -->
<% } else { %>
  <!-- some other html here -->
<% } %>

Operators

Complex if statements can be built in Plush using "common" operators:

  • == - checks equality of two expressions
  • != - checks that the two expressions are not equal
  • ~= - checks a string against a regular expression (foo ~= "^fo")
  • < - checks the left expression is less than the right expression
  • <= - checks the left expression is less than or equal to the right expression
  • > - checks the left expression is greater than the right expression
  • >= - checks the left expression is greater than or equal to the right expression
  • && - requires both the left and right expression to be true
  • , - requires either the left or right expression to be true

Grouped Expressions

<%= if ((1 < 2) && (someFunc() == "hi")) { %>
  <!-- some html here -->
<% } else { %>
  <!-- some other html here -->
<% } %>

Maps

Maps in Plush will get translated to the Go type map[string]interface{} when used. Creating, and using maps in Plush is not too different than in JSON:

<% let h = {key: "value", "a number": 1, bool: true} %>

Would become the following in Go:

map[string]interface{}{
  "key": "value",
  "a number": 1,
  "bool": true,
}

Accessing maps is just like access a JSON object:

<%= h["key"] %>

Using maps as options to functions in Plush is incredibly powerful. See the sections on Functions and Helpers to see more examples.

Arrays

Arrays in Plush will get translated to the Go type []interface{} when used.

<% let a = [1, 2, "three", "four", h] %>
[]interface{}{ 1, 2, "three", "four", h }

For Loops

There are three different types that can be looped over: maps, arrays/slices, and iterators. The format for them all looks the same:

<%= for (key, value) in expression { %>
  <%= key %> <%= value %>
<% } %>

The values inside the () part of the statement are the names you wish to give to the key (or index) and the value of the expression. The expression can be an array, map, or iterator type.

Arrays

Using Index and Value

<%= for (i, x) in someArray { %>
  <%= i %> <%= x %>
<% } %>

Using Just the Value

<%= for (val) in someArray { %>
  <%= val %>
<% } %>

Maps

Using Index and Value

<%= for (k, v) in someMap { %>
  <%= k %> <%= v %>
<% } %>

Using Just the Value

<%= for (v) in someMap { %>
  <%= v %>
<% } %>

Iterators

type ranger struct {
	pos int
	end int
}

func (r *ranger) Next() interface{} {
	if r.pos < r.end {
		r.pos++
		return r.pos
	}
	return nil
}

func betweenHelper(a, b int) Iterator {
	return &ranger{pos: a, end: b - 1}
}
html := `<%= for (v) in between(3,6) { return v } %>`

ctx := plush.NewContext()
ctx.Set("between", betweenHelper)

s, err := plush.Render(html, ctx)
if err != nil {
  log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Print(s)
// output: 45

Helpers

For a full list, and documentation of, all the Helpers included in Plush, see github.com/gobuffalo/helpers.

Custom Helpers

html := `<p><%= one() %></p>
<p><%= greet("mark")%></p>
<%= can("update") { %>
<p>i can update</p>
<% } %>
<%= can("destroy") { %>
<p>i can destroy</p>
<% } %>
`

ctx := NewContext()

// one() #=> 1
ctx.Set("one", func() int {
  return 1
})

// greet("mark") #=> "Hi mark"
ctx.Set("greet", func(s string) string {
  return fmt.Sprintf("Hi %s", s)
})

// can("update") #=> returns the block associated with it
// can("adsf") #=> ""
ctx.Set("can", func(s string, help HelperContext) (template.HTML, error) {
  if s == "update" {
    h, err := help.Block()
    return template.HTML(h), err
  }
  return "", nil
})

s, err := Render(html, ctx)
if err != nil {
  log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Print(s)
// output: <p>1</p>
// <p>Hi mark</p>
// <p>i can update</p>

Special Thanks

This package absolutely 100% could not have been written without the help of Thorsten Ball's incredible book, Writing an Interpeter in Go.

Not only did the book make understanding the process of writing lexers, parsers, and asts, but it also provided the basis for the syntax of Plush itself.

If you have yet to read Thorsten's book, I can't recommend it enough. Please go and buy it!

主要指标

概览
名称与所有者gobuffalo/plush
主编程语言Go
编程语言Go (语言数: 2)
平台
许可证MIT License
所有者活动
创建于2017-03-01 21:40:32
推送于2025-05-15 19:01:33
最后一次提交
发布数96
最新版本名称v5.0.4 (发布于 )
第一版名称v1.0.0 (发布于 )
用户参与
星数0.9k
关注者数21
派生数57
提交数406
已启用问题?
问题数84
打开的问题数2
拉请求数101
打开的拉请求数0
关闭的拉请求数13
项目设置
已启用Wiki?
已存档?
是复刻?
已锁定?
是镜像?
是私有?