NAME¶
HTML::Template - Perl module to use HTML-like templating language
SYNOPSIS¶
First you make a template - this is just a normal HTML file with a few extra
tags, the simplest being "<TMPL_VAR>"
For example, test.tmpl:
<html>
<head><title>Test Template</title></head>
<body>
My Home Directory is <TMPL_VAR NAME=HOME>
<p>
My Path is set to <TMPL_VAR NAME=PATH>
</body>
</html>
Now you can use it in a small CGI program:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use HTML::Template;
# open the html template
my $template = HTML::Template->new(filename => 'test.tmpl');
# fill in some parameters
$template->param(HOME => $ENV{HOME});
$template->param(PATH => $ENV{PATH});
# send the obligatory Content-Type and print the template output
print "Content-Type: text/html\n\n", $template->output;
If all is well in the universe this should show something like this in your
browser when visiting the CGI:
My Home Directory is /home/some/directory
My Path is set to /bin;/usr/bin
DESCRIPTION¶
This module attempts to make using HTML templates simple and natural. It extends
standard HTML with a few new HTML-esque tags - "<TMPL_VAR>"
"<TMPL_LOOP>", "<TMPL_INCLUDE>",
"<TMPL_IF>", "<TMPL_ELSE>" and
"<TMPL_UNLESS>". The file written with HTML and these new tags
is called a template. It is usually saved separate from your script - possibly
even created by someone else! Using this module you fill in the values for the
variables, loops and branches declared in the template. This allows you to
separate design - the HTML - from the data, which you generate in the Perl
script.
This module is licensed under the same terms as Perl. See the LICENSE section
below for more details.
TUTORIAL¶
If you're new to HTML::Template, I suggest you start with the introductory
article available on Perl Monks:
http://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=65642
FAQ¶
Please see HTML::Template::FAQ
MOTIVATION¶
It is true that there are a number of packages out there to do HTML templates.
On the one hand you have things like HTML::Embperl which allows you freely mix
Perl with HTML. On the other hand lie home-grown variable substitution
solutions. Hopefully the module can find a place between the two.
One advantage of this module over a full HTML::Embperl-esque solution is that it
enforces an important divide - design and programming. By limiting the
programmer to just using simple variables and loops in the HTML, the template
remains accessible to designers and other non-perl people. The use of
HTML-esque syntax goes further to make the format understandable to others. In
the future this similarity could be used to extend existing HTML
editors/analyzers to support HTML::Template.
An advantage of this module over home-grown tag-replacement schemes is the
support for loops. In my work I am often called on to produce tables of data
in html. Producing them using simplistic HTML templates results in programs
containing lots of HTML since the HTML itself cannot represent loops. The
introduction of loop statements in the HTML simplifies this situation
considerably. The designer can layout a single row and the programmer can fill
it in as many times as necessary - all they must agree on is the parameter
names.
For all that, I think the best thing about this module is that it does just one
thing and it does it quickly and carefully. It doesn't try to replace Perl and
HTML, it just augments them to interact a little better. And it's pretty fast.
TMPL_VAR¶
<TMPL_VAR NAME="PARAMETER_NAME">
The "<TMPL_VAR>" tag is very simple. For each
"<TMPL_VAR>" tag in the template you call:
$template->param(PARAMETER_NAME => "VALUE")
When the template is output the "<TMPL_VAR>" is replaced with
the VALUE text you specified. If you don't set a parameter it just gets
skipped in the output.
You can also specify the value of the parameter as a code reference in order to
have "lazy" variables. These sub routines will only be referenced if
the variables are used. See "LAZY VALUES" for more information.
Attributes
The following "attributes" can also be specified in template var tags:
- •
- escape
This allows you to escape the value before it's put into the output. Th
This is useful when you want to use a TMPL_VAR in a context where those
characters would cause trouble. For example:
<input name=param type=text value="<TMPL_VAR PARAM>">
If you called "param()" with a value like "sam"my"
you'll get in trouble with HTML's idea of a double-quote. On the other
hand, if you use "escape=html", like this:
<input name=param type=text value="<TMPL_VAR PARAM ESCAPE=HTML>">
You'll get what you wanted no matter what value happens to be passed in for
param.
The following escape values are supported:
- •
- html
Replaces the following characters with their HTML entity equivalent:
"&", """, "'", "<",
">"
- •
- js
Escapes (with a backslash) the following characters: "\",
"'", """, "\n", "\r"
- •
- url
URL escapes any ASCII characters except for letters, numbers, "_",
"." and "-".
- •
- none
Performs no escaping. This is the default, but it's useful to be able to
explicitly turn off escaping if you are using the
"default_escape" option.
- •
- default
With this attribute you can assign a default value to a variable. For
example, this will output "the devil gave me a taco" if the
"who" variable is not set.
<TMPL_VAR WHO DEFAULT="the devil"> gave me a taco.
TMPL_LOOP¶
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="LOOP_NAME"> ... </TMPL_LOOP>
The "<TMPL_LOOP>" tag is a bit more complicated than
"<TMPL_VAR>". The "<TMPL_LOOP>" tag allows you
to delimit a section of text and give it a name. Inside this named loop you
place "<TMPL_VAR>"s. Now you pass to "param()" a
list (an array ref) of parameter assignments (hash refs) for this loop. The
loop iterates over the list and produces output from the text block for each
pass. Unset parameters are skipped. Here's an example:
In the template:
<TMPL_LOOP NAME=EMPLOYEE_INFO>
Name: <TMPL_VAR NAME=NAME> <br>
Job: <TMPL_VAR NAME=JOB> <p>
</TMPL_LOOP>
In your Perl code:
$template->param(
EMPLOYEE_INFO => [{name => 'Sam', job => 'programmer'}, {name => 'Steve', job => 'soda jerk'}]
);
print $template->output();
The output is:
Name: Sam
Job: programmer
Name: Steve
Job: soda jerk
As you can see above the "<TMPL_LOOP>" takes a list of variable
assignments and then iterates over the loop body producing output.
Often you'll want to generate a "<TMPL_LOOP>"'s contents
programmatically. Here's an example of how this can be done (many other ways
are possible!):
# a couple of arrays of data to put in a loop:
my @words = qw(I Am Cool);
my @numbers = qw(1 2 3);
my @loop_data = (); # initialize an array to hold your loop
while (@words and @numbers) {
my %row_data; # get a fresh hash for the row data
# fill in this row
$row_data{WORD} = shift @words;
$row_data{NUMBER} = shift @numbers;
# the crucial step - push a reference to this row into the loop!
push(@loop_data, \%row_data);
}
# finally, assign the loop data to the loop param, again with a reference:
$template->param(THIS_LOOP => \@loop_data);
The above example would work with a template like:
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="THIS_LOOP">
Word: <TMPL_VAR NAME="WORD">
Number: <TMPL_VAR NAME="NUMBER">
</TMPL_LOOP>
It would produce output like:
Word: I
Number: 1
Word: Am
Number: 2
Word: Cool
Number: 3
"<TMPL_LOOP>"s within "<TMPL_LOOP>"s are fine
and work as you would expect. If the syntax for the "param()" call
has you stumped, here's an example of a param call with one nested loop:
$template->param(
LOOP => [
{
name => 'Bobby',
nicknames => [{name => 'the big bad wolf'}, {name => 'He-Man'}],
},
],
);
Basically, each "<TMPL_LOOP>" gets an array reference. Inside
the array are any number of hash references. These hashes contain the
name=>value pairs for a single pass over the loop template.
Inside a "<TMPL_LOOP>", the only variables that are usable are
the ones from the "<TMPL_LOOP>". The variables in the outer
blocks are not visible within a template loop. For the computer-science geeks
among you, a "<TMPL_LOOP>" introduces a new scope much like a
perl subroutine call. If you want your variables to be global you can use
"global_vars" option to "new()" described below.
TMPL_INCLUDE¶
<TMPL_INCLUDE NAME="filename.tmpl">
This tag includes a template directly into the current template at the point
where the tag is found. The included template contents are used exactly as if
its contents were physically included in the master template.
The file specified can be an absolute path (beginning with a '/' under Unix, for
example). If it isn't absolute, the path to the enclosing file is tried first.
After that the path in the environment variable "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT"
is tried, if it exists. Next, the "path" option is consulted, first
as-is and then with "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" prepended if available. As
a final attempt, the filename is passed to "open()" directly. See
below for more information on "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" and the
"path" option to "new()".
As a protection against infinitely recursive includes, an arbitrary limit of 10
levels deep is imposed. You can alter this limit with the
"max_includes" option. See the entry for the
"max_includes" option below for more details.
TMPL_IF¶
<TMPL_IF NAME="PARAMETER_NAME"> ... </TMPL_IF>
The "<TMPL_IF>" tag allows you to include or not include a block
of the template based on the value of a given parameter name. If the parameter
is given a value that is true for Perl - like '1' - then the block is included
in the output. If it is not defined, or given a false value - like '0' - then
it is skipped. The parameters are specified the same way as with
"<TMPL_VAR>".
Example Template:
<TMPL_IF NAME="BOOL">
Some text that only gets displayed if BOOL is true!
</TMPL_IF>
Now if you call "$template->param(BOOL => 1)" then the above
block will be included by output.
"<TMPL_IF> </TMPL_IF>" blocks can include any valid
HTML::Template construct - "VAR"s and "LOOP"s and other
"IF"/"ELSE" blocks. Note, however, that intersecting a
"<TMPL_IF>" and a "<TMPL_LOOP>" is invalid.
Not going to work:
<TMPL_IF BOOL>
<TMPL_LOOP SOME_LOOP>
</TMPL_IF>
</TMPL_LOOP>
If the name of a "<TMPL_LOOP>" is used in a
"<TMPL_IF>", the "IF" block will output if the loop
has at least one row. Example:
<TMPL_IF LOOP_ONE>
This will output if the loop is not empty.
</TMPL_IF>
<TMPL_LOOP LOOP_ONE>
....
</TMPL_LOOP>
WARNING: Much of the benefit of HTML::Template is in decoupling your Perl and
HTML. If you introduce numerous cases where you have "TMPL_IF"s and
matching Perl "if"s, you will create a maintenance problem in
keeping the two synchronized. I suggest you adopt the practice of only using
"TMPL_IF" if you can do so without requiring a matching
"if" in your Perl code.
TMPL_ELSE¶
<TMPL_IF NAME="PARAMETER_NAME"> ... <TMPL_ELSE> ... </TMPL_IF>
You can include an alternate block in your "<TMPL_IF>" block by
using "<TMPL_ELSE>". NOTE: You still end the block with
"</TMPL_IF>", not "</TMPL_ELSE>"!
Example:
<TMPL_IF BOOL>
Some text that is included only if BOOL is true
<TMPL_ELSE>
Some text that is included only if BOOL is false
</TMPL_IF>
TMPL_UNLESS¶
<TMPL_UNLESS NAME="PARAMETER_NAME"> ... </TMPL_UNLESS>
This tag is the opposite of "<TMPL_IF>". The block is output if
the "PARAMETER_NAME" is set false or not defined. You can use
"<TMPL_ELSE>" with "<TMPL_UNLESS>" just as you
can with "<TMPL_IF>".
Example:
<TMPL_UNLESS BOOL>
Some text that is output only if BOOL is FALSE.
<TMPL_ELSE>
Some text that is output only if BOOL is TRUE.
</TMPL_UNLESS>
If the name of a "<TMPL_LOOP>" is used in a
"<TMPL_UNLESS>", the "<UNLESS>" block output
if the loop has zero rows.
<TMPL_UNLESS LOOP_ONE>
This will output if the loop is empty.
</TMPL_UNLESS>
<TMPL_LOOP LOOP_ONE>
....
</TMPL_LOOP>
NOTES¶
HTML::Template's tags are meant to mimic normal HTML tags. However, they are
allowed to "break the rules". Something like:
<img src="<TMPL_VAR IMAGE_SRC>">
is not really valid HTML, but it is a perfectly valid use and will work as
planned.
The "NAME=" in the tag is optional, although for extensibility's sake
I recommend using it. Example - "<TMPL_LOOP LOOP_NAME>" is
acceptable.
If you're a fanatic about valid HTML and would like your templates to conform to
valid HTML syntax, you may optionally type template tags in the form of HTML
comments. This may be of use to HTML authors who would like to validate their
templates' HTML syntax prior to HTML::Template processing, or who use
DTD-savvy editing tools.
<!-- TMPL_VAR NAME=PARAM1 -->
In order to realize a dramatic savings in bandwidth, the standard (non-comment)
tags will be used throughout this documentation.
METHODS¶
new¶
Call "new()" to create a new Template object:
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'file.tmpl',
option => 'value',
);
You must call "new()" with at least one "name =" value>
pair specifying how to access the template text. You can use "filename
=> 'file.tmpl'" to specify a filename to be opened as the template.
Alternately you can use:
my $t = HTML::Template->new(
scalarref => $ref_to_template_text,
option => 'value',
);
and
my $t = HTML::Template->new(
arrayref => $ref_to_array_of_lines,
option => 'value',
);
These initialize the template from in-memory resources. In almost every case
you'll want to use the filename parameter. If you're worried about all the
disk access from reading a template file just use mod_perl and the cache
option detailed below.
You can also read the template from an already opened filehandle, either
traditionally as a glob or as a FileHandle:
my $t = HTML::Template->new(filehandle => *FH, option => 'value');
The four "new()" calling methods can also be accessed as below, if you
prefer.
my $t = HTML::Template->new_file('file.tmpl', option => 'value');
my $t = HTML::Template->new_scalar_ref($ref_to_template_text, option => 'value');
my $t = HTML::Template->new_array_ref($ref_to_array_of_lines, option => 'value');
my $t = HTML::Template->new_filehandle($fh, option => 'value');
And as a final option, for those that might prefer it, you can call new as:
my $t = HTML::Template->new(
type => 'filename',
source => 'file.tmpl',
);
Which works for all three of the source types.
If the environment variable "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" is set and your
filename doesn't begin with "/", then the path will be relative to
the value of c<HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT>.
Example - if the environment variable "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" is
set to
/home/sam and I call "HTML::Template->new()" with
filename set to "sam.tmpl", HTML::Template will try to open
/home/sam/sam.tmpl to access the template file. You can also affect the
search path for files with the "path" option to "new()" -
see below for more information.
You can modify the Template object's behavior with "new()". The
options are available:
Error Detection Options
- •
- die_on_bad_params
If set to 0 the module will let you call:
$template->param(param_name => 'value')
even if 'param_name' doesn't exist in the template body. Defaults to 1.
- •
- force_untaint
If set to 1 the module will not allow you to set unescaped parameters with
tainted values. If set to 2 you will have to untaint all parameters,
including ones with the escape attribute. This option makes sure you
untaint everything so you don't accidentally introduce e.g.
cross-site-scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities. Requires taint mode. Defaults
to 0.
- •
- strict - if set to 0 the module will allow things that look like they
might be TMPL_* tags to get by without dieing. Example:
<TMPL_HUH NAME=ZUH>
Would normally cause an error, but if you call new with "strict =>
0" HTML::Template will ignore it. Defaults to 1.
- •
- vanguard_compatibility_mode
If set to 1 the module will expect to see "<TMPL_VAR>"s that
look like "%NAME%" in addition to the standard syntax. Also sets
"die_on_bad_params =" 0>. If you're not at Vanguard Media
trying to use an old format template don't worry about this one. Defaults
to 0.
Caching Options
- •
- cache
If set to 1 the module will cache in memory the parsed templates based on
the filename parameter, the modification date of the file and the options
passed to "new()". This only applies to templates opened with
the filename parameter specified, not scalarref or arrayref templates.
Caching also looks at the modification times of any files included using
"<TMPL_INCLUDE>" tags, but again, only if the template is
opened with filename parameter.
This is mainly of use in a persistent environment like Apache/mod_perl. It
has absolutely no benefit in a normal CGI environment since the script is
unloaded from memory after every request. For a cache that does work for a
non-persistent environment see the "shared_cache" option below.
My simplistic testing shows that using cache yields a 90% performance
increase under mod_perl. Cache defaults to 0.
- •
- shared_cache
If set to 1 the module will store its cache in shared memory using the
IPC::SharedCache module (available from CPAN). The effect of this will be
to maintain a single shared copy of each parsed template for all instances
of HTML::Template on the same machine to use. This can be a significant
reduction in memory usage in an environment with a single machine but
multiple servers. As an example, on one of our systems we use 4MB of
template cache and maintain 25 httpd processes - shared_cache results in
saving almost 100MB! Of course, some reduction in speed versus normal
caching is to be expected. Another difference between normal caching and
shared_cache is that shared_cache will work in a non-persistent
environment (like normal CGI) - normal caching is only useful in a
persistent environment like Apache/mod_perl.
By default HTML::Template uses the IPC key 'TMPL' as a shared root segment
(0x4c504d54 in hex), but this can be changed by setting the
"ipc_key" "new()" parameter to another 4-character or
integer key. Other options can be used to affect the shared memory cache
correspond to IPC::SharedCache options - "ipc_mode",
"ipc_segment_size" and "ipc_max_size". See
IPC::SharedCache for a description of how these work - in most cases you
shouldn't need to change them from the defaults.
For more information about the shared memory cache system used by
HTML::Template see IPC::SharedCache.
- •
- double_cache
If set to 1 the module will use a combination of "shared_cache"
and normal cache mode for the best possible caching. Of course, it also
uses the most memory of all the cache modes. All the same ipc_* options
that work with "shared_cache" apply to "double_cache"
as well. Defaults to 0.
- •
- blind_cache
If set to 1 the module behaves exactly as with normal caching but does not
check to see if the file has changed on each request. This option should
be used with caution, but could be of use on high-load servers. My tests
show "blind_cache" performing only 1 to 2 percent faster than
cache under mod_perl.
NOTE: Combining this option with shared_cache can result in stale
templates stuck permanently in shared memory!
- •
- file_cache
If set to 1 the module will store its cache in a file using the Storable
module. It uses no additional memory, and my simplistic testing shows that
it yields a 50% performance advantage. Like "shared_cache", it
will work in a non-persistent environments (like CGI). Default is 0.
If you set this option you must set the "file_cache_dir" option.
See below for details.
NOTE: Storable uses "flock()" to ensure safe access to
cache files. Using "file_cache" on a system or filesystem (like
NFS) without "flock()" support is dangerous.
- •
- file_cache_dir
Sets the directory where the module will store the cache files if
"file_cache" is enabled. Your script will need write permissions
to this directory. You'll also need to make sure the sufficient space is
available to store the cache files.
- •
- file_cache_dir_mode
Sets the file mode for newly created "file_cache" directories and
subdirectories. Defaults to "0700" for security but this may be
inconvenient if you do not have access to the account running the
webserver.
- •
- double_file_cache
If set to 1 the module will use a combination of "file_cache" and
normal "cache" mode for the best possible caching. The
file_cache_* options that work with file_cache apply to
"double_file_cache" as well. Defaults to 0.
- •
- cache_lazy_vars
The option tells HTML::Template to cache the values returned from code
references used for "TMPL_VAR"s. See "LAZY VALUES" for
details.
- •
- cache_lazy_loops
The option tells HTML::Template to cache the values returned from code
references used for "TMPL_LOOP"s. See "LAZY VALUES"
for details.
Filesystem Options
- •
- path
You can set this variable with a list of paths to search for files specified
with the "filename" option to "new()" and for files
included with the "<TMPL_INCLUDE>" tag. This list is only
consulted when the filename is relative. The
"HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" environment variable is always tried first
if it exists. Also, if "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" is set then an
attempt will be made to prepend "HTML_TEMPLATE_ROOT" onto paths
in the path array. In the case of a "<TMPL_INCLUDE>" file,
the path to the including file is also tried before path is consulted.
Example:
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'file.tmpl',
path => ['/path/to/templates', '/alternate/path'],
);
NOTE: the paths in the path list must be expressed as UNIX paths,
separated by the forward-slash character ('/').
- •
- search_path_on_include
If set to a true value the module will search from the top of the array of
paths specified by the path option on every
"<TMPL_INCLUDE>" and use the first matching template
found. The normal behavior is to look only in the current directory for a
template to include. Defaults to 0.
- •
- utf8
Setting this to true tells HTML::Template to treat your template files as
UTF-8 encoded. This will apply to any file's passed to "new()"
or any included files. It won't do anything special to scalars templates
passed to "new()" since you should be doing the encoding on
those yourself.
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'umlauts_are_awesome.tmpl',
utf8 => 1,
);
Most templates are either ASCII (the default) or UTF-8 encoded Unicode. But
if you need some other encoding other than these 2, look at the
"open_mode" option.
NOTE: The "utf8" and "open_mode" options cannot
be used at the same time.
- •
- open_mode
You can set this option to an opening mode with which all template files
will be opened.
For example, if you want to use a template that is UTF-16 encoded unicode:
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'file.tmpl',
open_mode => '<:encoding(UTF-16)',
);
That way you can force a different encoding (than the default ASCII or
UTF-8), CR/LF properties etc. on the template files. See PerlIO for
details.
NOTE: this only works in perl 5.7.1 and above.
NOTE: you have to supply an opening mode that actually permits
reading from the file handle.
NOTE: The "utf8" and "open_mode" options cannot
be used at the same time.
Debugging Options
- •
- debug
If set to 1 the module will write random debugging information to STDERR.
Defaults to 0.
- •
- stack_debug
If set to 1 the module will use Data::Dumper to print out the contents of
the parse_stack to STDERR. Defaults to 0.
- •
- cache_debug
If set to 1 the module will send information on cache loads, hits and misses
to STDERR. Defaults to 0.
- •
- shared_cache_debug
If set to 1 the module will turn on the debug option in IPC::SharedCache.
Defaults to 0.
- •
- memory_debug
If set to 1 the module will send information on cache memory usage to
STDERR. Requires the GTop module. Defaults to 0.
Miscellaneous Options
- •
- associate
This option allows you to inherit the parameter values from other objects.
The only requirement for the other object is that it have a
"param()" method that works like HTML::Template's
"param()". A good candidate would be a CGI query object.
Example:
my $query = CGI->new;
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'template.tmpl',
associate => $query,
);
Now, "$template->output()" will act as though
$template->param(form_field => $cgi->param('form_field'));
had been specified for each key/value pair that would be provided by the
"$cgi->param()" method. Parameters you set directly take
precedence over associated parameters.
You can specify multiple objects to associate by passing an anonymous array
to the associate option. They are searched for parameters in the order
they appear:
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'template.tmpl',
associate => [$query, $other_obj],
);
NOTE: The parameter names are matched in a case-insensitive manner.
If you have two parameters in a CGI object like 'NAME' and 'Name' one will
be chosen randomly by associate. This behavior can be changed by the
"case_sensitive" option.
- •
- case_sensitive
Setting this option to true causes HTML::Template to treat template variable
names case-sensitively. The following example would only set one parameter
without the "case_sensitive" option:
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'template.tmpl',
case_sensitive => 1
);
$template->param(
FieldA => 'foo',
fIELDa => 'bar',
);
This option defaults to off.
NOTE: with "case_sensitive" and
"loop_context_vars" the special loop variables are available in
lower-case only.
- •
- loop_context_vars
When this parameter is set to true (it is false by default) extra variables
that depend on the loop's context are made available inside a loop. These
are:
- •
- __first__
Value that is true for the first iteration of the loop and false every other
time.
- •
- __last__
Value that is true for the last iteration of the loop and false every other
time.
- •
- __inner__
Value that is true for the every iteration of the loop except for the first
and last.
- •
- __outer__
Value that is true for the first and last iterations of the loop.
- •
- __odd__
Value that is true for the every odd iteration of the loop.
- •
- __even__
Value that is true for the every even iteration of the loop.
- •
- __counter__
An integer (starting from 1) whose value increments for each iteration of
the loop.
- •
- __index__
An integer (starting from 0) whose value increments for each iteration of
the loop.
Just like any other "TMPL_VAR"s these variables can be used in
"<TMPL_IF>", "<TMPL_UNLESS>" and
"<TMPL_ELSE>" to control how a loop is output.
Example:
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="FOO">
<TMPL_IF NAME="__first__">
This only outputs on the first pass.
</TMPL_IF>
<TMPL_IF NAME="__odd__">
This outputs every other pass, on the odd passes.
</TMPL_IF>
<TMPL_UNLESS NAME="__odd__">
This outputs every other pass, on the even passes.
</TMPL_UNLESS>
<TMPL_IF NAME="__inner__">
This outputs on passes that are neither first nor last.
</TMPL_IF>
This is pass number <TMPL_VAR NAME="__counter__">.
<TMPL_IF NAME="__last__">
This only outputs on the last pass.
</TMPL_IF>
</TMPL_LOOP>
One use of this feature is to provide a "separator" similar in effect
to the perl function "join()". Example:
<TMPL_LOOP FRUIT>
<TMPL_IF __last__> and </TMPL_IF>
<TMPL_VAR KIND><TMPL_UNLESS __last__>, <TMPL_ELSE>.</TMPL_UNLESS>
</TMPL_LOOP>
Would output something like:
Apples, Oranges, Brains, Toes, and Kiwi.
Given an appropriate "param()" call, of course.
NOTE: A loop
with only a single pass will get both "__first__" and
"__last__" set to true, but not "__inner__".
- •
- no_includes
Set this option to 1 to disallow the "<TMPL_INCLUDE>" tag in
the template file. This can be used to make opening untrusted templates
slightly less dangerous. Defaults to 0.
- •
- max_includes
Set this variable to determine the maximum depth that includes can reach.
Set to 10 by default. Including files to a depth greater than this value
causes an error message to be displayed. Set to 0 to disable this
protection.
- •
- die_on_missing_include
If true, then HTML::Template will die if it can't find a file for a
"<TMPL_INCLUDE>". This defaults to true.
- •
- global_vars
Normally variables declared outside a loop are not available inside a loop.
This option makes "<TMPL_VAR>"s like global variables in
Perl - they have unlimited scope. This option also affects
"<TMPL_IF>" and "<TMPL_UNLESS>".
Example:
This is a normal variable: <TMPL_VAR NORMAL>.<P>
<TMPL_LOOP NAME=FROOT_LOOP>
Here it is inside the loop: <TMPL_VAR NORMAL><P>
</TMPL_LOOP>
Normally this wouldn't work as expected, since "<TMPL_VAR
NORMAL>"'s value outside the loop is not available inside the
loop.
The global_vars option also allows you to access the values of an enclosing
loop within an inner loop. For example, in this loop the inner loop will
have access to the value of "OUTER_VAR" in the correct
iteration:
<TMPL_LOOP OUTER_LOOP>
OUTER: <TMPL_VAR OUTER_VAR>
<TMPL_LOOP INNER_LOOP>
INNER: <TMPL_VAR INNER_VAR>
INSIDE OUT: <TMPL_VAR OUTER_VAR>
</TMPL_LOOP>
</TMPL_LOOP>
One side-effect of "global_vars" is that variables you set with
"param()" that might otherwise be ignored when
"die_on_bad_params" is off will stick around. This is necessary
to allow inner loops to access values set for outer loops that don't
directly use the value.
NOTE: "global_vars" is not "global_loops" (which
does not exist). That means that loops you declare at one scope are not
available inside other loops even when "global_vars" is on.
- •
- filter
This option allows you to specify a filter for your template files. A filter
is a subroutine that will be called after HTML::Template reads your
template file but before it starts parsing template tags.
In the most simple usage, you simply assign a code reference to the filter
parameter. This subroutine will receive a single argument - a reference to
a string containing the template file text. Here is an example that
accepts templates with tags that look like "!!!ZAP_VAR FOO!!!"
and transforms them into HTML::Template tags:
my $filter = sub {
my $text_ref = shift;
$$text_ref =~ s/!!!ZAP_(.*?)!!!/<TMPL_$1>/g;
};
# open zap.tmpl using the above filter
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'zap.tmpl',
filter => $filter,
);
More complicated usages are possible. You can request that your filter
receives the template text as an array of lines rather than as a single
scalar. To do that you need to specify your filter using a hash-ref. In
this form you specify the filter using the "sub" key and the
desired argument format using the "format" key. The available
formats are "scalar" and "array". Using the
"array" format will incur a performance penalty but may be more
convenient in some situations.
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'zap.tmpl',
filter => {
sub => $filter,
format => 'array',
}
);
You may also have multiple filters. This allows simple filters to be
combined for more elaborate functionality. To do this you specify an array
of filters. The filters are applied in the order they are specified.
my $template = HTML::Template->new(
filename => 'zap.tmpl',
filter => [
{
sub => \&decompress,
format => 'scalar',
},
{
sub => \&remove_spaces,
format => 'array',
},
]
);
The specified filters will be called for any "TMPL_INCLUDE"ed
files just as they are for the main template file.
- •
- default_escape
Set this parameter to a valid escape type (see the "escape"
option) and HTML::Template will apply the specified escaping to all
variables unless they declare a different escape in the template.
config¶
A package method that is used to set/get the global default configuration
options. For instance, if you want to set the "utf8" flag to always
be on for every template loaded by this process you would do:
HTML::Template->config(utf8 => 1);
Or if you wanted to check if the "utf8" flag was on or not, you could
do:
my %config = HTML::Template->config;
if( $config{utf8} ) {
...
}
Any configuration options that are valid for "new()" are acceptable to
be passed to this method.
param¶
"param()" can be called in a number of ways
- 1 - To return a list of parameters in the template :
-
my @parameter_names = $self->param();
- 2 - To return the value set to a param :
-
my $value = $self->param('PARAM');
- 3 - To set the value of a parameter :
-
# For simple TMPL_VARs:
$self->param(PARAM => 'value');
# with a subroutine reference that gets called to get the value
# of the scalar. The sub will receive the template object as a
# parameter.
$self->param(PARAM => sub { return 'value' });
# And TMPL_LOOPs:
$self->param(LOOP_PARAM => [{PARAM => VALUE_FOR_FIRST_PASS}, {PARAM => VALUE_FOR_SECOND_PASS}]);
- 4 - To set the value of a number of parameters :
-
# For simple TMPL_VARs:
$self->param(
PARAM => 'value',
PARAM2 => 'value'
);
# And with some TMPL_LOOPs:
$self->param(
PARAM => 'value',
PARAM2 => 'value',
LOOP_PARAM => [{PARAM => VALUE_FOR_FIRST_PASS}, {PARAM => VALUE_FOR_SECOND_PASS}],
ANOTHER_LOOP_PARAM => [{PARAM => VALUE_FOR_FIRST_PASS}, {PARAM => VALUE_FOR_SECOND_PASS}],
);
- 5 - To set the value of a a number of parameters using a hash-ref :
-
$self->param(
{
PARAM => 'value',
PARAM2 => 'value',
LOOP_PARAM => [{PARAM => VALUE_FOR_FIRST_PASS}, {PARAM => VALUE_FOR_SECOND_PASS}],
ANOTHER_LOOP_PARAM => [{PARAM => VALUE_FOR_FIRST_PASS}, {PARAM => VALUE_FOR_SECOND_PASS}],
}
);
An error occurs if you try to set a value that is tainted if the
"force_untaint" option is set.
clear_params¶
Sets all the parameters to undef. Useful internally, if nowhere else!
output¶
"output()" returns the final result of the template. In most
situations you'll want to print this, like:
print $template->output();
When output is called each occurrence of "<TMPL_VAR NAME=name>"
is replaced with the value assigned to "name" via
"param()". If a named parameter is unset it is simply replaced with
''. "<TMPL_LOOP>"s are evaluated once per parameter set,
accumulating output on each pass.
Calling "output()" is guaranteed not to change the state of the
HTML::Template object, in case you were wondering. This property is mostly
important for the internal implementation of loops.
You may optionally supply a filehandle to print to automatically as the template
is generated. This may improve performance and lower memory consumption.
Example:
$template->output(print_to => *STDOUT);
The return value is undefined when using the "print_to" option.
query¶
This method allow you to get information about the template structure. It can be
called in a number of ways. The simplest usage of query is simply to check
whether a parameter name exists in the template, using the "name"
option:
if ($template->query(name => 'foo')) {
# do something if a variable of any type named FOO is in the template
}
This same usage returns the type of the parameter. The type is the same as the
tag minus the leading 'TMPL_'. So, for example, a "TMPL_VAR"
parameter returns 'VAR' from "query()".
if ($template->query(name => 'foo') eq 'VAR') {
# do something if FOO exists and is a TMPL_VAR
}
Note that the variables associated with "TMPL_IF"s and
"TMPL_UNLESS"s will be identified as 'VAR' unless they are also used
in a "TMPL_LOOP", in which case they will return 'LOOP'.
"query()" also allows you to get a list of parameters inside a loop
(and inside loops inside loops). Example loop:
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="EXAMPLE_LOOP">
<TMPL_VAR NAME="BEE">
<TMPL_VAR NAME="BOP">
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="EXAMPLE_INNER_LOOP">
<TMPL_VAR NAME="INNER_BEE">
<TMPL_VAR NAME="INNER_BOP">
</TMPL_LOOP>
</TMPL_LOOP>
And some query calls:
# returns 'LOOP'
$type = $template->query(name => 'EXAMPLE_LOOP');
# returns ('bop', 'bee', 'example_inner_loop')
@param_names = $template->query(loop => 'EXAMPLE_LOOP');
# both return 'VAR'
$type = $template->query(name => ['EXAMPLE_LOOP', 'BEE']);
$type = $template->query(name => ['EXAMPLE_LOOP', 'BOP']);
# and this one returns 'LOOP'
$type = $template->query(name => ['EXAMPLE_LOOP', 'EXAMPLE_INNER_LOOP']);
# and finally, this returns ('inner_bee', 'inner_bop')
@inner_param_names = $template->query(loop => ['EXAMPLE_LOOP', 'EXAMPLE_INNER_LOOP']);
# for non existent parameter names you get undef this returns undef.
$type = $template->query(name => 'DWEAZLE_ZAPPA');
# calling loop on a non-loop parameter name will cause an error. This dies:
$type = $template->query(loop => 'DWEAZLE_ZAPPA');
As you can see above the "loop" option returns a list of parameter
names and both "name" and "loop" take array refs in order
to refer to parameters inside loops. It is an error to use "loop"
with a parameter that is not a loop.
Note that all the names are returned in lowercase and the types are uppercase.
Just like "param()", "query()" with no arguments returns all
the parameter names in the template at the top level.
LAZY VALUES¶
As mentioned above, both "TMPL_VAR" and "TMPL_LOOP" values
can be code references. These code references are only executed if the
variable or loop is used in the template. This is extremely useful if you want
to make a variable available to template designers but it can be expensive to
calculate, so you only want to do so if you have to.
Maybe an example will help to illustrate. Let's say you have a template like
this:
<tmpl_if we_care>
<tmpl_if life_universe_and_everything>
</tmpl_if>
If "life_universe_and_everything" is expensive to calculate we can
wrap it's calculation in a code reference and HTML::Template will only execute
that code if "we_care" is also true.
$tmpl->param(life_universe_and_everything => sub { calculate_42() });
Your code reference will be given a single argument, the HTML::Template object
in use. In the above example, if we wanted "calculate_42()" to have
this object we'd do something like this:
$tmpl->param(life_universe_and_everything => sub { calculate_42(shift) });
This same approach can be used for "TMPL_LOOP"s too:
<tmpl_if we_care>
<tmpl_loop needles_in_haystack>
Found <tmpl_var __counter>!
</tmpl_loop>
</tmpl_if>
And in your Perl code:
$tmpl->param(needles_in_haystack => sub { find_needles() });
The only difference in the "TMPL_LOOP" case is that the subroutine
needs to return a reference to an ARRAY, not just a scalar value.
Multiple Calls¶
It's important to recognize that while this feature is designed to save
processing time when things aren't needed, if you're not careful it can
actually increase the number of times you perform your calculation.
HTML::Template calls your code reference each time it seems your loop in the
template, this includes the times that you might use the loop in a conditional
("TMPL_IF" or "TMPL_UNLESS"). For instance:
<tmpl_if we care>
<tmpl_if needles_in_haystack>
<tmpl_loop needles_in_haystack>
Found <tmpl_var __counter>!
</tmpl_loop>
<tmpl_else>
No needles found!
</tmpl_if>
</tmpl_if>
This will actually call "find_needles()" twice which will be even
worse than you had before. One way to work around this is to cache the return
value yourself:
my $needles;
$tmpl->param(needles_in_haystack => sub { defined $needles ? $needles : $needles = find_needles() });
BUGS¶
I am aware of no bugs - if you find one, join the mailing list and tell us about
it. You can join the HTML::Template mailing-list by visiting:
http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/html-template-users
Of course, you can still email me directly ("sam@tregar.com") with
bugs, but I reserve the right to forward bug reports to the mailing list.
When submitting bug reports, be sure to include full details, including the
VERSION of the module, a test script and a test template demonstrating the
problem!
If you're feeling really adventurous, HTML::Template has a publically available
Git repository. See below for more information in the PUBLIC GIT REPOSITORY
section.
CREDITS¶
This module was the brain child of my boss, Jesse Erlbaum
("jesse@vm.com") at Vanguard Media (
http://vm.com) . The most
original idea in this module - the "<TMPL_LOOP>" - was
entirely his.
Fixes, Bug Reports, Optimizations and Ideas have been generously provided by:
- •
- Richard Chen
- •
- Mike Blazer
- •
- Adriano Nagelschmidt Rodrigues
- •
- Andrej Mikus
- •
- Ilya Obshadko
- •
- Kevin Puetz
- •
- Steve Reppucci
- •
- Richard Dice
- •
- Tom Hukins
- •
- Eric Zylberstejn
- •
- David Glasser
- •
- Peter Marelas
- •
- James William Carlson
- •
- Frank D. Cringle
- •
- Winfried Koenig
- •
- Matthew Wickline
- •
- Doug Steinwand
- •
- Drew Taylor
- •
- Tobias Brox
- •
- Michael Lloyd
- •
- Simran Gambhir
- •
- Chris Houser <chouser@bluweb.com>
- •
- Larry Moore
- •
- Todd Larason
- •
- Jody Biggs
- •
- T.J. Mather
- •
- Martin Schroth
- •
- Dave Wolfe
- •
- uchum
- •
- Kawai Takanori
- •
- Peter Guelich
- •
- Chris Nokleberg
- •
- Ralph Corderoy
- •
- William Ward
- •
- Ade Olonoh
- •
- Mark Stosberg
- •
- Lance Thomas
- •
- Roland Giersig
- •
- Jere Julian
- •
- Peter Leonard
- •
- Kenny Smith
- •
- Sean P. Scanlon
- •
- Martin Pfeffer
- •
- David Ferrance
- •
- Gyepi Sam
- •
- Darren Chamberlain
- •
- Paul Baker
- •
- Gabor Szabo
- •
- Craig Manley
- •
- Richard Fein
- •
- The Phalanx Project
- •
- Sven Neuhaus
- •
- Michael Peters
- •
- Jan Dubois
- •
- Moritz Lenz
Thanks!
WEBSITE¶
You can find information about HTML::Template and other related modules at:
http://html-template.sourceforge.net
PUBLIC GIT REPOSITORY¶
HTML::Template now has a publicly accessible Git repository provided by GitHub
(github.com). You can access it by going to
https://github.com/mpeters/html-template. Give it a try!
AUTHOR¶
Sam Tregar, "sam@tregar.com"
CO-MAINTAINER¶
Michael Peters, "mpeters@plusthree.com"
LICENSE¶
HTML::Template : A module for using HTML Templates with Perl
Copyright (C) 2000-2011 Sam Tregar (sam@tregar.com)
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself, which means using either:
a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version,
or
b) the "Artistic License" which comes with this module.
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 either
the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the Artistic License with this
module. If not, I'll be glad to provide one.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307
USA