# mstch - {{mustache}} templates in C++11 ![mstch logo](http://i.imgur.com/XAdHwUs.png) mstch is a complete implementation of [{{mustache}}](http://mustache.github.io/) templates using modern C++. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/no1msd/mstch.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/no1msd/mstch) ## Supported features mstch supports the complete feature set described in the `mustache(5)` [manpage](http://mustache.github.com/mustache.5.html): - JSON-like data structure using [Boost.Variant](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_57_0/doc/html/variant.html) - variables, sections, inverted sections - partials - changing the delimiter - C++11 lambdas - C++ objects as view models ## Basic usage ```c++ #include #include int main() { std::string view{"{{#names}}Hi {{name}}!\n{{/names}}"}; mstch::map context{ {"names", mstch::array{ mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Chris"}}}, mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Mark"}}}, mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Scott"}}}, }} }; std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl; return 0; } ``` The output of this example will be: ```html Hi Chris! Hi Mark! Hi Scott! ``` ### Data structure The types in the example above, `mstch::array` and `mstch::map` are actually aliases for standard types: ```c++ using map = std::map; using array = std::vector; ``` `mstch::node` is a `boost::variant` that can hold a `std::string`, `int`, `bool`, lambda expression or a `std::shared_ptr` to a `mstch::object` (see below), also a map or an array recursively. Essentially it works just like a JSON object. Note that when using a `std::string` as value you must explicitly specify the type, since a `const char*` literal like `"foobar"` would be implicitly converted to `bool`. Alternatively you can use [C++14 string_literals](http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/string/basic_string/operator%22%22s) if your compiler supports it. ## Advanced usage ### Partials Partials can be passed in a `std::map` as the third parameter of the `mstch::render` function: ```c++ std::string view{"{{#names}}{{> user}}{{/names}}"}; std::string user_view{"{{name}}\n"}; mstch::map context{ {"names", mstch::array{ mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Chris"}}}, mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Mark"}}}, mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Scott"}}}, }} }; std::cout << mstch::render(view, context, {{"user", user_view}}) << std::endl; ``` The output will be: ```html Chris Mark Scott ``` ### Lambdas C++11 lambda expressions can be used to add logic to your templates. Like a `const char*` literal, lambdas can be implicitly converted to `bool`, so they must be wrapped in a `mstch::lambda` object when used in a `mstch::node`. The lambda expression passed to `mstch::lambda` returns a `std::string` and accepts either no parameters: ```c++ std::string view{"Hello {{lambda}}!"}; mstch::map context{ {"lambda", mstch::lambda{[]() { return std::string{"World"}; }}} }; std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl; ``` The output will be: ```html Hello World! ``` Or it accepts a `const std::string&` and a `mstch::renderer`. The first one is passed the unrendered literal block, the second is a `std::function` that can be called to render it: ```c++ std::string view{"{{#bold}}{{yay}} :){{/bold}}"}; mstch::map context{ {"yay", std::string{"Yay!"}}, {"bold", mstch::lambda{[](const std::string& text, mstch::renderer render) { return "" + render(text) + ""; }}} }; std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl; ``` The output will be: ```html Yay! :) ``` ### Objects TODO ## Requirements - A C++ compiler with decent C++11 support. Currently only tested with GCC 4.9. - Boost 1.54+ for [Boost.Variant](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_57_0/doc/html/variant.html) - CMake 2.8+ for building ## Installing From the root of the source tree: ```bash $ mkdir build $ cd build $ cmake .. $ make $ make install ``` ## Running the unit tests Unit tests are using the [Catch](https://github.com/philsquared/Catch) framework, included in the repository. [Boost.Program_Options](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_58_0/doc/html/program_options.html) and [The Boost Algorithm Library](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_57_0/libs/algorithm/doc/html/index.html) are also required to build them. ```bash $ mkdir build $ cd build $ cmake -DWITH_UNIT_TESTS=ON .. $ make $ make test ```