Dancer2::Template::TemplateToolkit - Template toolkit engine for Dancer2
version 1.1.1
To use this engine, you may configure Dancer2 via config.yaml
:
template: "template_toolkit"
Or you may also change the rendering engine on a per-route basis by setting it manually with set
:
# code code code
set template => 'template_toolkit';
Most configuration variables available when creating a new instance of a Template::Toolkit object can be declared inside the template toolkit section on the engines configuration in your config.yml file. For example:
engines:
template:
template_toolkit:
start_tag: '<%'
end_tag: '%>'
(Note: start_tag
and end_tag
are regexes. If you want to use PHP-style tags, you will need to list them as <\?
and \?>
.) See Template::Manual::Config for the configuration variables.
In addition to the standard configuration variables, the option show_private_variables
is also available. Template::Toolkit, by default, does not render private variables (the ones starting with an underscore). If in your project it gets easier to disable this feature than changing variable names, add this option to your configuration.
show_private_variables: true
Warning: Given the way Template::Toolkit implements this option, different Dancer2 applications running within the same interpreter will share this option!
This template engine allows you to use Template::Toolkit in Dancer2.
Renders the template. The first arg is a filename for the template file or a reference to a string that contains the template. The second arg is a hashref for the tokens that you wish to pass to Template::Toolkit for rendering.
Template::Toolkit allows you to replace certain parts, like the internal STASH (Template::Stash). In order to do that, one usually passes an object of another implementation such as Template::Stash::AutoEscaping into the constructor.
Unfortunately that is not possible when you configure Template::Toolkit from your Dancer2 configuration file. You cannot instantiate a Perl object in a yaml file. Instead, you need to subclass this module, and use the subclass in your configuration file.
A subclass to use the aforementioned Template::Stash::AutoEscaping might look like this:
package Dancer2::Template::TemplateToolkit::AutoEscaping;
# or MyApp::
use Moo;
use Template::Stash::AutoEscaping;
extends 'Dancer2::Template::TemplateToolkit';
around '_build_engine' => sub {
my $orig = shift;
my $self = shift;
my $tt = $self->$orig(@_);
# replace the stash object
$tt->service->context->{STASH} = Template::Stash::AutoEscaping->new(
$self->config->{STASH}
);
return $tt;
};
1;
You can then use this new subclass in your config file instead of template_toolkit
.
# in config.yml
engines:
template:
TemplateToolkit::AutoEscaping:
start_tag: '<%'
end_tag: '%>'
# optional arguments here
STASH:
The same approach should work for SERVICE (Template::Service), CONTEXT (Template::Context), PARSER (Template::Parser) and GRAMMAR (Template::Grammar). If you intend to replace several of these components in your app, it is suggested to create an app-specific subclass that handles all of them at the same time.
Template::Tookit templates can be cached by adding the COMPILE_EXT
property to your template configuration settings:
# in config.yml
engines:
template:
template_toolkit:
start_tag: '<%'
end_tag: '%>'
COMPILE_EXT: '.tcc' # cached file extension
Template caching will avoid the need to re-parse template files or blocks each time they are used. Cached templates are automatically updated when you update the original template file.
By default, cached templates are saved in the same directory as your template. To save cached templates in a different directory, you can set the COMPILE_DIR
property in your Dancer2 configuration file.
Please see "Caching_and_Compiling_Options" in Template::Manual::Config for further details and more caching options.
Dancer2, Dancer2::Core::Role::Template, Template::Toolkit.
Dancer Core Developers
This software is copyright (c) 2024 by Alexis Sukrieh.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.