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diff --git a/src/main/java/com/google/escapevelocity/README.md b/src/main/java/com/google/escapevelocity/README.md deleted file mode 100644 index 0e9ff1e..0000000 --- a/src/main/java/com/google/escapevelocity/README.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,378 +0,0 @@ -# EscapeVelocity summary - -EscapeVelocity is a templating engine that can be used from Java. It is a reimplementation of a subset of -functionality from [Apache Velocity](http://velocity.apache.org/). - -This is not a supported Google product. - -For a fuller explanation of Velocity's functioning, see its -[User Guide](http://velocity.apache.org/engine/releases/velocity-1.7/user-guide.html) - -If EscapeVelocity successfully produces a result from a template evaluation, that result should be -the exact same string that Velocity produces. If not, that is a bug. - -EscapeVelocity has no facilities for HTML escaping and it is not appropriate for producing -HTML output that might include portions of untrusted input. - -## Motivation - -Velocity has a convenient templating language. It is easy to read, and it has widespread support -from tools such as editors and coding websites. However, *using* Velocity can prove difficult. -Its use to generate Java code in the [AutoValue][AutoValue] annotation processor required many -[workarounds][VelocityHacks]. The way it dynamically loads classes as part of its standard operation -makes it hard to [shade](https://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-shade-plugin/) it, which in the case -of AutoValue led to interference if Velocity was used elsewhere in a project. - -EscapeVelocity has a simple API that does not involve any class-loading or other sources of -problems. It and its dependencies can be shaded with no difficulty. - -## Loading a template - -The entry point for EscapeVelocity is the `Template` class. To obtain an instance, use -`Template.from(Reader)`. If a template is stored in a file, that file conventionally has the -suffix `.vm` (for Velocity Macros). But since the argument is a `Reader`, you can also load -a template directly from a Java string, using `StringReader`. - -Here's how you might make a `Template` instance from a template file that is packaged as a resource -in the same package as the calling class: - -```java -InputStream in = getClass().getResourceAsStream("foo.vm"); -if (in == null) { - throw new IllegalArgumentException("Could not find resource foo.vm"); -} -Reader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(in)); -Template template = Template.parseFrom(reader); -``` - -## Expanding a template - -Once you have a `Template` object, you can use it to produce a string where the variables in the -template are given the values you provide. You can do this any number of times, specifying the -same or different values each time. - -Suppose you have this template: - -``` -The $language word for $original is $translated. -``` - -You might write this code: - -```java -Map<String, String> vars = new HashMap<>(); -vars.put("language", "French"); -vars.put("original", "toe"); -vars.put("translated", "orteil"); -String result = template.evaluate(vars); -``` - -The `result` string would then be: `The French word for toe is orteil.` - -## Comments - -The characters `##` introduce a comment. Characters from `##` up to and including the following -newline are omitted from the template. This template has comments: - -``` -Line 1 ## with a comment -Line 2 -``` - -It is the same as this template: -``` -Line 1 Line 2 -``` - -## References - -EscapeVelocity supports most of the reference types described in the -[Velocity User Guide](http://velocity.apache.org/engine/releases/velocity-1.7/user-guide.html#References) - -### Variables - -A variable has an ASCII name that starts with a letter (a-z or A-Z) and where any other characters -are also letters or digits or hyphens (-) or underscores (_). A variable reference can be written -as `$foo` or as `${foo}`. The value of a variable can be of any Java type. If the value `v` of -variable `foo` is not a String then the result of `$foo` in a template will be `String.valueOf(v)`. -Variables must be defined before they are referenced; otherwise an `EvaluationException` will be -thrown. - -Variable names are case-sensitive: `$foo` is not the same variable as `$Foo` or `$FOO`. - -Initially the values of variables come from the Map that is passed to `Template.evaluate`. Those -values can be changed, and new ones defined, using the `#set` directive in the template: - -``` -#set ($foo = "bar") -``` - -Setting a variable affects later references to it in the template, but has no effect on the -`Map` that was passed in or on later template evaluations. - -### Properties - -If a reference looks like `$purchase.Total` then the value of the `$purchase` variable must be a -Java object that has a public method `getTotal()` or `gettotal()`, or a method called `isTotal()` or -`istotal()` that returns `boolean`. The result of `$purchase.Total` is then the result of calling -that method on the `$purchase` object. - -If you want to have a period (`.`) after a variable reference *without* it being a property -reference, you can use braces like this: `${purchase}.Total`. If, after a property reference, you -have a further period, you can put braces around the reference like this: -`${purchase.Total}.nonProperty`. - -### Methods - -If a reference looks like `$purchase.addItem("scones", 23)` then the value of the `$purchase` -variable must be a Java object that has a public method `addItem` with two parameters that match -the given values. Unlike Velocity, EscapeVelocity requires that there be exactly one such method. -It is OK if there are other `addItem` methods provided they are not compatible with the -arguments provided. - -Properties are in fact a special case of methods: instead of writing `$purchase.Total` you could -write `$purchase.getTotal()`. Braces can be used to make the method invocation explicit -(`${purchase.getTotal()}`) or to prevent method invocation (`${purchase}.getTotal()`). - -### Indexing - -If a reference looks like `$indexme[$i]` then the value of the `$indexme` variable must be a Java -object that has a public `get` method that takes one argument that is compatible with the index. -For example, `$indexme` might be a `List` and `$i` might be an integer. Then the reference would -be the result of `List.get(int)` for that list and that integer. Or, `$indexme` might be a `Map`, -and the reference would be the result of `Map.get(Object)` for the object `$i`. In general, -`$indexme[$i]` is equivalent to `$indexme.get($i)`. - -Unlike Velocity, EscapeVelocity does not allow `$indexme` to be a Java array. - -### Undefined references - -If a variable has not been given a value, either by being in the initial Map argument or by being -set in the template, then referencing it will provoke an `EvaluationException`. There is -a special case for `#if`: if you write `#if ($var)` then it is allowed for `$var` not to be defined, -and it is treated as false. - -### Setting properties and indexes: not supported - -Unlke Velocity, EscapeVelocity does not allow `#set` assignments with properties or indexes: - -``` -#set ($data.User = "jon") ## Allowed in Velocity but not in EscapeVelocity -#set ($map["apple"] = "orange") ## Allowed in Velocity but not in EscapeVelocity -``` - -## Expressions - -In certain contexts, such as the `#set` directive we have just seen or certain other directives, -EscapeVelocity can evaluate expressions. An expression can be any of these: - -* A reference, of the kind we have just seen. The value is the value of the reference. -* A string literal enclosed in double quotes, like `"this"`. A string literal must appear on - one line. EscapeVelocity does not support the characters `$` or `\\` in a string literal. -* An integer literal such as `23` or `-100`. EscapeVelocity does not support floating-point - literals. -* A Boolean literal, `true` or `false`. -* Simpler expressions joined together with operators that have the same meaning as in Java: - `!`, `==`, `!=`, `<`, `<=`, `>`, `>=`, `&&`, `||`, `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `%`. The operators have the - same precedence as in Java. -* A simpler expression in parentheses, for example `(2 + 3)`. - -Velocity supports string literals with single quotes, like `'this`' and also references within -strings, like `"a $reference in a string"`, but EscapeVelocity does not. - -## Directives - -A directive is introduced by a `#` character followed by a word. We have already seen the `#set` -directive, which sets the value of a variable. The other directives are listed below. - -Directives can be spelled with or without braces, so `#set` or `#{set}`. - -### `#if`/`#elseif`/`#else` - -The `#if` directive selects parts of the template according as a condition is true or false. -The simplest case looks like this: - -``` -#if ($condition) yes #end -``` - -This evaluates to the string ` yes ` if the variable `$condition` is defined and has a true value, -and to the empty string otherwise. It is allowed for `$condition` not to be defined in this case, -and then it is treated as false. - -The expression in `#if` (here `$condition`) is considered true if its value is not null and not -equal to the Boolean value `false`. - -An `#if` directive can also have an `#else` part, for example: - -``` -#if ($condition) yes #else no #end -``` - -This evaluates to the string ` yes ` if the condition is true or the string ` no ` if it is not. - -An `#if` directive can have any number of `#elseif` parts. For example: - -``` -#if ($i == 0) zero #elseif ($i == 1) one #elseif ($i == 2) two #else many #end -``` - -### `#foreach` - -The `#foreach` directive repeats a part of the template once for each value in a list. - -``` -#foreach ($product in $allProducts) - ${product}! -#end -``` - -This will produce one line for each value in the `$allProducts` variable. The value of -`$allProducts` can be a Java `Iterable`, such as a `List` or `Set`; or it can be an object array; -or it can be a Java `Map`. When it is a `Map` the `#foreach` directive loops over every *value* -in the `Map`. - -If `$allProducts` is a `List` containing the strings `oranges` and `lemons` then the result of the -`#foreach` would be this: - -``` - - oranges! - - - lemons! - -``` - -When the `#foreach` completes, the loop variable (`$product` in the example) goes back to whatever -value it had before, or to being undefined if it was undefined before. - -Within the `#foreach`, a special variable `$foreach` is defined, such that you can write -`$foreach.hasNext`, which will be true if there are more values after this one or false if this -is the last value. For example: - -``` -#foreach ($product in $allProducts)${product}#if ($foreach.hasNext), #end#end -``` - -This would produce the output `oranges, lemons` for the list above. (The example is scrunched up -to avoid introducing extraneous spaces, as described in the [section](#spaces) on spaces -below.) - -Velocity gives the `$foreach` variable other properties (`index` and `count`) but EscapeVelocity -does not. - -### Macros - -A macro is a part of the template that can be reused in more than one place, potentially with -different parameters each time. In the simplest case, a macro has no arguments: - -``` -#macro (hello) bonjour #end -``` - -Then the macro can be referenced by writing `#hello()` and the result will be the string ` bonjour ` -inserted at that point. - -Macros can also have parameters: - -``` -#macro (greet $hello $world) $hello, $world! #end -``` - -Then `#greet("bonjour", "monde")` would produce ` bonjour, monde! `. The comma is optional, so -you could also write `#greet("bonjour" "monde")`. - -When a macro completes, the parameters (`$hello` and `$world` in the example) go back to whatever -values they had before, or to being undefined if they were undefined before. - -All macro definitions take effect before the template is evaluated, so you can use a macro at a -point in the template that is before the point where it is defined. This also means that you can't -define a macro conditionally: - -``` -## This doesn't work! -#if ($language == "French") -#macro (hello) bonjour #end -#else -#macro (hello) hello #end -#end -``` - -There is no particular reason to define the same macro more than once, but if you do it is the -first definition that is retained. In the `#if` example just above, the `bonjour` version will -always be used. - -Macros can make templates hard to understand. You may prefer to put the logic in a Java method -rather than a macro, and call the method from the template using `$methods.doSomething("foo")` -or whatever. - -## Block quoting - -If you have text that should be treated verbatim, you can enclose it in `#[[...]]#`. The text -represented by `...` will be copied into the output. `#` and `$` characters will have no -effect in that text. - -``` -#[[ This is not a #directive, and this is not a $variable. ]]# -``` - -## Including other templates - -If you want to include a template from another file, you can use the `#parse` directive. -This can be useful if you have macros that are shared between templates, for example. - -``` -#set ($foo = "bar") -#parse("macros.vm") -#mymacro($foo) ## #mymacro defined in macros.vm -``` - -For this to work, you will need to tell EscapeVelocity how to find "resources" such as -`macro.vm` in the example. You might use something like this: - -``` -ResourceOpener resourceOpener = resourceName -> { - InputStream inputStream = getClass().getResource(resourceName); - if (inputStream == null) { - throw new IOException("Unknown resource: " + resourceName); - } - return new BufferedReader(InputStreamReader(inputStream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8)); -}; -Template template = Template.parseFrom("foo.vm", resourceOpener); -``` - -In this case, the `resourceOpener` is used to find the main template `foo.vm`, as well as any -templates it may reference in `#parse` directives. - -## <a name="spaces"></a> Spaces - -For the most part, spaces and newlines in the template are preserved exactly in the output. -To avoid unwanted newlines, you may end up using `##` comments. In the `#foreach` example above -we had this: - -``` -#foreach ($product in $allProducts)${product}#if ($foreach.hasNext), #end#end -``` - -That was to avoid introducing unwanted spaces and newlines. A more readable way to achieve the same -result is this: - -``` -#foreach ($product in $allProducts)## -${product}## -#if ($foreach.hasNext), #end## -#end -``` - -Spaces are ignored between the `#` of a directive and the `)` that closes it, so there is no trace -in the output of the spaces in `#foreach ($product in $allProducts)` or `#if ($foreach.hasNext)`. -Spaces are also ignored inside references, such as `$indexme[ $i ]` or `$callme( $i , $j )`. - -If you are concerned about the detailed formatting of the text from the template, you may want to -post-process it. For example, if it is Java code, you could use a formatter such as -[google-java-format](https://github.com/google/google-java-format). Then you shouldn't have to -worry about extraneous spaces. - -[VelocityHacks]: https://github.com/google/auto/blob/ca2384d5ad15a0c761b940384083cf5c50c6e839/value/src/main/java/com/google/auto/value/processor/TemplateVars.java#L54 -[AutoValue]: https://github.com/google/auto/tree/master/value |