class Mustache::Parser
The Parser
is responsible for taking a string template and converting it into an array of tokens and, really, expressions. It raises SyntaxError
if there is anything it doesn't understand and knows which sigil corresponds to which tag type.
For example, given this template:
Hi {{thing}}!
Run through the Parser
we'll get these tokens:
[:multi, [:static, "Hi "], [:mustache, :etag, "thing"], [:static, "!\n"]]
You can see the array of tokens for any template with the mustache(1) command line tool:
$ mustache --tokens test.mustache [:multi, [:static, "Hi "], [:mustache, :etag, "thing"], [:static, "!\n"]]
Constants
- ALLOWED_CONTENT
The content allowed in a tag name.
- ANY_CONTENT
These types of tags allow any content, the rest only allow
ALLOWED_CONTENT
.- SKIP_WHITESPACE
After these types of tags, all whitespace until the end of the line will be skipped if they are the first (and only) non-whitespace content on the line.
- VALID_TYPES
The sigil types which are valid after an opening `{{`
Attributes
Public Class Methods
Add a supported sigil type (with optional aliases) to the Parser
.
Requires a block, which will be sent the following parameters:
-
content - The raw content of the tag
-
fetch- A mustache context fetch expression for the content
-
padding - Indentation whitespace from the currently-parsed line
-
pre_match_position - Location of the scanner before a match was made
The provided block will be evaluated against the current instance of Parser
, and may append to the Parser's @result as needed.
# File lib/mustache/parser.rb, line 65 def self.add_type(*types, &block) types = types.map(&:to_s) type, *aliases = types method_name = "scan_tag_#{type}".to_sym define_method(method_name, &block) aliases.each { |a| alias_method "scan_tag_#{a}", method_name } types.each { |t| VALID_TYPES << t unless VALID_TYPES.include?(t) } @valid_types = nil end
Accepts an options hash which does nothing but may be used in the future.
# File lib/mustache/parser.rb, line 91 def initialize(options = {}) @options = options @option_inline_partials_at_compile_time = options[:inline_partials_at_compile_time] if @option_inline_partials_at_compile_time @partial_resolver = options[:partial_resolver] raise ArgumentError.new "Missing or invalid partial_resolver" unless @partial_resolver.respond_to? :call end # Initialize default tags self.otag ||= '{{' self.ctag ||= '}}' end
# File lib/mustache/parser.rb, line 50 def self.valid_types @valid_types ||= Regexp.new(VALID_TYPES.map { |t| Regexp.escape(t) }.join('|') ) end
Public Instance Methods
Given a string template, returns an array of tokens.
# File lib/mustache/parser.rb, line 119 def compile(template) @encoding = nil if template.respond_to?(:encoding) @encoding = template.encoding template = template.dup.force_encoding("BINARY") end # Keeps information about opened sections. @sections = [] @result = [:multi] @scanner = StringScanner.new(template) # Scan until the end of the template. until @scanner.eos? scan_tags || scan_text end unless @sections.empty? # We have parsed the whole file, but there's still opened sections. type, pos, _ = @sections.pop error "Unclosed section #{type.inspect}", pos end @result end
The closing tag delimiter. This too may be changed at runtime.
# File lib/mustache/parser.rb, line 113 def ctag=(value) @ctag_regex = regexp value @ctag = value end
The opening tag delimiter. This may be changed at runtime.
# File lib/mustache/parser.rb, line 105 def otag=(value) regex = regexp value @otag_regex = /([ \t]*)?#{regex}/ @otag_not_regex = /(^[ \t]*)?#{regex}/ @otag = value end