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MUSTACHE(5)                     Mustache Manual                     MUSTACHE(5)

NAME
       mustache - Logic-less templates.

SYNOPSIS
       A typical Mustache template:

           Hello {{name}}
           You have just won {{value}} dollars!
           {{#in_ca}}
           Well, {{taxed_value}} dollars, after taxes.
           {{/in_ca}}

       Given the following hash:

           {
             "name": "Chris",
             "value": 10000,
             "taxed_value": 10000 - (10000 * 0.4),
             "in_ca": true
           }

       Will produce the following:

           Hello Chris
           You have just won 10000 dollars!
           Well, 6000.0 dollars, after taxes.

DESCRIPTION
       Mustache  can be used for HTML, config files, source code - anything. It
       works by expanding tags in a template using values provided in a hash or
       object.

       We call it  "logic-less"  because  there  are  no  if  statements,  else
       clauses,  or  for  loops. Instead there are only tags. Some tags are re-
       placed with a value, some nothing, and others a series of  values.  This
       document explains the different types of Mustache tags.

TAG TYPES
       Tags  are  indicated by the double mustaches. {{person}} is a tag, as is
       {{#person}}. In both examples, we´d refer to person as the  key  or  tag
       key. Let´s talk about the different types of tags.

   Variables
       The  most basic tag type is the variable. A {{name}} tag in a basic tem-
       plate will try to find the name key in the current context. If there  is
       no name key, the parent contexts will be checked recursively. If the top
       context  is reached and the name key is still not found, nothing will be
       rendered.

       All variables are HTML escaped by default. If you  want  to  return  raw
       contents without escaping, use the triple mustache: {{{name}}}.

       You  can  also use & to return its raw contents: {{& name}}. This may be
       useful when changing delimiters (see "Set Delimiter" below).

       By default a variable "miss" returns an empty string. This  can  usually
       be  configured  in  your  Mustache library. The Ruby version of Mustache
       supports raising an exception in this situation, for instance.

       Template:

           * {{name}}
           * {{age}}
           * {{company}}
           * {{{company}}}

       Hash:

           {
             "name": "Chris",
             "company": "<b>GitHub</b>"
           }

       Output:

           * Chris
           *
           * &lt;b&gt;GitHub&lt;/b&gt;
           * <b>GitHub</b>

   Sections
       Sections render blocks of text zero or  more  times,  depending  on  the
       value of the key in the current context.

       A  section  begins  with a pound and ends with a slash. That is, {{#per-
       son}} begins a "person" section while {{/person}} ends it.

       The behavior of the section is determined by the value of the key.

       False Values or Empty Lists

       If the person key exists and has a value of false or an empty list,  the
       HTML between the pound and slash will not be displayed.

       Template:

           Shown.
           {{#person}}
             Never shown!
           {{/person}}

       Hash:

           {
             "person": false
           }

       Output:

           Shown.

       Non-Empty Lists

       If the person key exists and has a non-false value, the HTML between the
       pound and slash will be rendered and displayed one or more times.

       When  the  value is a non-empty list, the text in the block will be dis-
       played once for each item in the list. The context of the block will  be
       set to the current item for each iteration. In this way we can loop over
       collections.

       Template:

           {{#repo}}
             <b>{{name}}</b>
           {{/repo}}

       Hash:

           {
             "repo": [
               { "name": "resque" },
               { "name": "hub" },
               { "name": "rip" }
             ]
           }

       Output:

           <b>resque</b>
           <b>hub</b>
           <b>rip</b>

       Lambdas

       When  the  value is a callable object, such as a function or lambda, the
       object will be invoked and passed the block of text. The text passed  is
       the  literal  block,  unrendered. {{tags}} will not have been expanded -
       the lambda should do that on its own. In this way you can implement fil-
       ters or caching.

       Template:

           {{#wrapped}}
             {{name}} is awesome.
           {{/wrapped}}

       Hash:

           {
             "name": "Willy",
             "wrapped": function() {
               return function(text, render) {
                 return "<b>" + render(text) + "</b>"
               }
             }
           }

       Output:

           <b>Willy is awesome.</b>

       Non-False Values

       When the value is non-false but not a list, it will be used as the  con-
       text for a single rendering of the block.

       Template:

           {{#person?}}
             Hi {{name}}!
           {{/person?}}

       Hash:

           {
             "person?": { "name": "Jon" }
           }

       Output:

           Hi Jon!

   Inverted Sections
       An  inverted  section  begins  with a caret (hat) and ends with a slash.
       That is {{^person}} begins a "person" inverted section while {{/person}}
       ends it.

       While sections can be used to render text zero or more  times  based  on
       the  value  of  the key, inverted sections may render text once based on
       the inverse value of the key. That is, they will be rendered if the  key
       doesn´t exist, is false, or is an empty list.

       Template:

           {{#repo}}
             <b>{{name}}</b>
           {{/repo}}
           {{^repo}}
             No repos :(
           {{/repo}}

       Hash:

           {
             "repo": []
           }

       Output:

           No repos :(

   Comments
       Comments begin with a bang and are ignored. The following template:

           <h1>Today{{! ignore me }}.</h1>

       Will render as follows:

           <h1>Today.</h1>

       Comments may contain newlines.

   Partials
       Partials begin with a greater than sign, like {{> box}}.

       Partials are rendered at runtime (as opposed to compile time), so recur-
       sive partials are possible. Just avoid infinite loops.

       They also inherit the calling context. Whereas in ERB you may have this:

           <%= partial :next_more, :start => start, :size => size %>

       Mustache requires only this:

           {{> next_more}}

       Why? Because the next_more.mustache file will inherit the size and start
       methods from the calling context.

       In  this  way you may want to think of partials as includes, or template
       expansion, even though it´s not literally true.

       For example, this template and partial:

           base.mustache:
           <h2>Names</h2>
           {{#names}}
             {{> user}}
           {{/names}}

           user.mustache:
           <strong>{{name}}</strong>

       Can be thought of as a single, expanded template:

           <h2>Names</h2>
           {{#names}}
             <strong>{{name}}</strong>
           {{/names}}

   Set Delimiter
       Set Delimiter tags start with an equal sign and change  the  tag  delim-
       iters from {{ and }} to custom strings.

       Consider the following contrived example:

           * {{default_tags}}
           {{=<% %>=}}
           * <% erb_style_tags %>
           <%={{ }}=%>
           * {{ default_tags_again }}

       Here  we  have  a list with three items. The first item uses the default
       tag style, the second uses erb style as defined  by  the  Set  Delimiter
       tag,  and  the  third returns to the default style after yet another Set
       Delimiter declaration.

       According      to       ctemplates       http://google-ctemplate.google-
       code.com/svn/trunk/doc/howto.html,  this  "is  useful for languages like
       TeX, where double-braces may occur in the text and are  awkward  to  use
       for markup."

       Custom delimiters may not contain whitespace or the equals sign.

COPYRIGHT
       Mustache is Copyright (C) 2009 Chris Wanstrath

       Original CTemplate by Google

SEE ALSO
       mustache(1), http://mustache.github.io/

DEFUNKT                          November 2016                      MUSTACHE(5)

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