defmodule Temple do
@moduledoc """
Temple syntax is available inside the `temple`, and is compiled into efficient Elixir code at compile time using the configured `EEx.Engine`.
You should checkout the [guides](https://hexdocs.pm/temple/your-first-template.html) for a more in depth explanation.
## Usage
```elixir
defmodule MyApp.HomePage do
import Temple
def render() do
assigns = %{title: "My Site | Sign Up", logged_in: false}
temple do
"<!DOCTYPE html>"
html do
head do
meta charset: "utf-8"
meta http_equiv: "X-UA-Compatible", content: "IE=edge"
meta name: "viewport", content: "width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"
link rel: "stylesheet", href: "/css/app.css"
title do: @title
end
body do
header class: "header" do
ul do
li do
a href: "/", do: "Home"
if @logged_in do
a href: "/logout", do: "Logout"
else
a href: "/login", do: "Login"
main do
"Hi! Welcome to my website."
```
## Configuration
### Engine
By default Temple wil use the `EEx.SmartEngine`, but you can configure it to use any other engine. Examples could be `Phoenix.HTML.Engine` or `Phoenix.LiveView.Engine`.
config :temple, engine: Phoenix.HTML.Engine
### Aliases
You can add an alias for an element if there is a namespace collision with a function. If you are using `Phoenix.HTML`, there will be namespace collisions with the `<link>` and `<label>` elements.
config :temple, :aliases,
label: :label_tag,
link: :link_tag,
select: :select_tag
label_tag do
"Email"
link_tag href: "/css/site.css"
This will result in:
```html
<label>
Email
</label>
<link href="/css/site.css">
"""
defmacro temple(block) do
quote do
require Temple.Renderer
Temple.Renderer.compile(unquote(block))
@doc false
defdelegate engine, to: Temple.Renderer
@doc """
Compiles runtime attributes.
To use this function, you set it in application config.
By default, Temple uses `{Phoenix.HTML, :attributes_escape}`. This is useful if you want to use `EEx.SmartEngine`.
config :temple,
engine: EEx.SmartEngine,
attributes: {Temple, :attributes}
> #### Note {: .info}
>
> This function does not do any HTML escaping
> This function is used by the compiler and shouldn't need to be used directly.
def attributes(attributes) do
for {key, value} <- attributes, into: "" do
case value do
true -> ~s| #{key}|
false -> ""
value -> ~s| #{key}="#{value}"|