package embedded_ocaml_templates
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
md5=540b7c3b5c7d5c21755556272b6ff5d7
sha512=0756d0a9a4ed247580b3e8818c8e5c53075ffe5604fe139ab30267309ab620fcfca5b0187427dc4bb27ec1ab6c538cc50fb139b5279de4a1774592f5d5af20d1
Description
Inspired by EJS templates, it does currently implements all of its functionnality. I plan to implement everything eventually, especially if someone actually want to use this. Please contact me if you find this interesting but there is a missing feature that you need !
Published: 27 Nov 2020
README
Embedded Ocaml Templates
EML is a simple templating language that lets you generate text with plain OCaml. The syntax is as follow :
First of all, you need to declare the template's arguments at the top of the template :
<%# arg1 (arg2:type) (arg3_1, arg3_2) %>
The you can use two tags :
<% ocaml code here %>
This tag expect any ocaml code. If what you put in here is an expression of type unit, you should include the ";" yourself. You are able to open parenthesis and close them in a subsequent tag.
<%- ocaml expression here %>
This tag expect an expression of type string and is going to be replaced by the value of the expression. If this tag is inside a loop or an if statement, it's going to behave you would expect it to.
This tag has a variant :
<%d- ocaml expression here %>
Here you can use any "simple" printf format specifier, where simple is defined by the following regex :
let format_flag = [%sedlex.regexp? '#' | '0' | '-' | '+']
let simple_format =
[%sedlex.regexp?
( Opt format_flag,
( 'd' | 'i' | 'u' | 'n' | 'l' | 'N' | 'L' | 'x' | 'o' | 'X' | 's' | 'c'
| 'S' | 'C' | 'f' | 'e' | 'E' | 'g' | 'G' | 'h' | 'H' | 'b' | 'B'
| ('l' | 'n' | 'L'), ('d' | 'i' | 'u' | 'x' | 'X' | 'o')
| 'a' | 't' ) )]
You can use more complicated printf format specifiers using the following syntax :
<%(d%)- ocaml expression here %>
There are some identifiers that you cannot use : "append" and "elements" are going to be variables in the generated code. "{|" and "|}" are used as string delimiters. Using them will not necessarily raise an error, however I cannot guarantee what will happen if you do.
Because OCaml does not have an eval function, the templates have to be compiled. What is provided by this package is an executable that will compile either a single .eml file into an OCaml module containing a function that render the template, or take a whole directory containing a function for each .eml file and a submodule for each subdirectory (it's recursive).
Here is an exemple of a dune rule:
(rule
(target templates.ml)
(deps (source_tree templates))
(action (run eml_compiler templates)))
There is also a ppx rewriter provided :
let name = "John"
let john = [%eml "<%-name%>"]
The ppx may be a bit slow at compile time, because I actually call the OCaml parser on generated code to build it. This has the advantage to be most likely compatible with future versions of OCaml, but I think it may be better to do it with some more standard tools such as metaquot.
Dependencies (9)
- containers
- ppx_deriving
-
ppxlib
< "0.23.0"
-
menhir
>= "20180523"
- uutf
-
core
>= "v0.12"
-
sedlex
>= "2.0"
-
dune
>= "2.5.0"
-
ocaml
>= "4.08.0"
Dev Dependencies
None
Used by
None
Conflicts
None