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      1 // Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
      2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
      3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
      4 
      5 /*
      6 Package template implements data-driven templates for generating textual output.
      7 
      8 To generate HTML output, see package html/template, which has the same interface
      9 as this package but automatically secures HTML output against certain attacks.
     10 
     11 Templates are executed by applying them to a data structure. Annotations in the
     12 template refer to elements of the data structure (typically a field of a struct
     13 or a key in a map) to control execution and derive values to be displayed.
     14 Execution of the template walks the structure and sets the cursor, represented
     15 by a period '.' and called "dot", to the value at the current location in the
     16 structure as execution proceeds.
     17 
     18 The input text for a template is UTF-8-encoded text in any format.
     19 "Actions"--data evaluations or control structures--are delimited by
     20 "{{" and "}}"; all text outside actions is copied to the output unchanged.
     21 Except for raw strings, actions may not span newlines, although comments can.
     22 
     23 Once parsed, a template may be executed safely in parallel, although if parallel
     24 executions share a Writer the output may be interleaved.
     25 
     26 Here is a trivial example that prints "17 items are made of wool".
     27 
     28 	type Inventory struct {
     29 		Material string
     30 		Count    uint
     31 	}
     32 	sweaters := Inventory{"wool", 17}
     33 	tmpl, err := template.New("test").Parse("{{.Count}} items are made of {{.Material}}")
     34 	if err != nil { panic(err) }
     35 	err = tmpl.Execute(os.Stdout, sweaters)
     36 	if err != nil { panic(err) }
     37 
     38 More intricate examples appear below.
     39 
     40 Text and spaces
     41 
     42 By default, all text between actions is copied verbatim when the template is
     43 executed. For example, the string " items are made of " in the example above appears
     44 on standard output when the program is run.
     45 
     46 However, to aid in formatting template source code, if an action's left delimiter
     47 (by default "{{") is followed immediately by a minus sign and ASCII space character
     48 ("{{- "), all trailing white space is trimmed from the immediately preceding text.
     49 Similarly, if the right delimiter ("}}") is preceded by a space and minus sign
     50 (" -}}"), all leading white space is trimmed from the immediately following text.
     51 In these trim markers, the ASCII space must be present; "{{-3}}" parses as an
     52 action containing the number -3.
     53 
     54 For instance, when executing the template whose source is
     55 
     56 	"{{23 -}} < {{- 45}}"
     57 
     58 the generated output would be
     59 
     60 	"23<45"
     61 
     62 For this trimming, the definition of white space characters is the same as in Go:
     63 space, horizontal tab, carriage return, and newline.
     64 
     65 Actions
     66 
     67 Here is the list of actions. "Arguments" and "pipelines" are evaluations of
     68 data, defined in detail in the corresponding sections that follow.
     69 
     70 */
     71 //	{{/* a comment */}}
     72 //		A comment; discarded. May contain newlines.
     73 //		Comments do not nest and must start and end at the
     74 //		delimiters, as shown here.
     75 /*
     76 
     77 	{{pipeline}}
     78 		The default textual representation (the same as would be
     79 		printed by fmt.Print) of the value of the pipeline is copied
     80 		to the output.
     81 
     82 	{{if pipeline}} T1 {{end}}
     83 		If the value of the pipeline is empty, no output is generated;
     84 		otherwise, T1 is executed. The empty values are false, 0, any
     85 		nil pointer or interface value, and any array, slice, map, or
     86 		string of length zero.
     87 		Dot is unaffected.
     88 
     89 	{{if pipeline}} T1 {{else}} T0 {{end}}
     90 		If the value of the pipeline is empty, T0 is executed;
     91 		otherwise, T1 is executed. Dot is unaffected.
     92 
     93 	{{if pipeline}} T1 {{else if pipeline}} T0 {{end}}
     94 		To simplify the appearance of if-else chains, the else action
     95 		of an if may include another if directly; the effect is exactly
     96 		the same as writing
     97 			{{if pipeline}} T1 {{else}}{{if pipeline}} T0 {{end}}{{end}}
     98 
     99 	{{range pipeline}} T1 {{end}}
    100 		The value of the pipeline must be an array, slice, map, or channel.
    101 		If the value of the pipeline has length zero, nothing is output;
    102 		otherwise, dot is set to the successive elements of the array,
    103 		slice, or map and T1 is executed. If the value is a map and the
    104 		keys are of basic type with a defined order ("comparable"), the
    105 		elements will be visited in sorted key order.
    106 
    107 	{{range pipeline}} T1 {{else}} T0 {{end}}
    108 		The value of the pipeline must be an array, slice, map, or channel.
    109 		If the value of the pipeline has length zero, dot is unaffected and
    110 		T0 is executed; otherwise, dot is set to the successive elements
    111 		of the array, slice, or map and T1 is executed.
    112 
    113 	{{template "name"}}
    114 		The template with the specified name is executed with nil data.
    115 
    116 	{{template "name" pipeline}}
    117 		The template with the specified name is executed with dot set
    118 		to the value of the pipeline.
    119 
    120 	{{block "name" pipeline}} T1 {{end}}
    121 		A block is shorthand for defining a template
    122 			{{define "name"}} T1 {{end}}
    123 		and then executing it in place
    124 			{{template "name" .}}
    125 		The typical use is to define a set of root templates that are
    126 		then customized by redefining the block templates within.
    127 
    128 	{{with pipeline}} T1 {{end}}
    129 		If the value of the pipeline is empty, no output is generated;
    130 		otherwise, dot is set to the value of the pipeline and T1 is
    131 		executed.
    132 
    133 	{{with pipeline}} T1 {{else}} T0 {{end}}
    134 		If the value of the pipeline is empty, dot is unaffected and T0
    135 		is executed; otherwise, dot is set to the value of the pipeline
    136 		and T1 is executed.
    137 
    138 Arguments
    139 
    140 An argument is a simple value, denoted by one of the following.
    141 
    142 	- A boolean, string, character, integer, floating-point, imaginary
    143 	  or complex constant in Go syntax. These behave like Go's untyped
    144 	  constants.
    145 	- The keyword nil, representing an untyped Go nil.
    146 	- The character '.' (period):
    147 		.
    148 	  The result is the value of dot.
    149 	- A variable name, which is a (possibly empty) alphanumeric string
    150 	  preceded by a dollar sign, such as
    151 		$piOver2
    152 	  or
    153 		$
    154 	  The result is the value of the variable.
    155 	  Variables are described below.
    156 	- The name of a field of the data, which must be a struct, preceded
    157 	  by a period, such as
    158 		.Field
    159 	  The result is the value of the field. Field invocations may be
    160 	  chained:
    161 	    .Field1.Field2
    162 	  Fields can also be evaluated on variables, including chaining:
    163 	    $x.Field1.Field2
    164 	- The name of a key of the data, which must be a map, preceded
    165 	  by a period, such as
    166 		.Key
    167 	  The result is the map element value indexed by the key.
    168 	  Key invocations may be chained and combined with fields to any
    169 	  depth:
    170 	    .Field1.Key1.Field2.Key2
    171 	  Although the key must be an alphanumeric identifier, unlike with
    172 	  field names they do not need to start with an upper case letter.
    173 	  Keys can also be evaluated on variables, including chaining:
    174 	    $x.key1.key2
    175 	- The name of a niladic method of the data, preceded by a period,
    176 	  such as
    177 		.Method
    178 	  The result is the value of invoking the method with dot as the
    179 	  receiver, dot.Method(). Such a method must have one return value (of
    180 	  any type) or two return values, the second of which is an error.
    181 	  If it has two and the returned error is non-nil, execution terminates
    182 	  and an error is returned to the caller as the value of Execute.
    183 	  Method invocations may be chained and combined with fields and keys
    184 	  to any depth:
    185 	    .Field1.Key1.Method1.Field2.Key2.Method2
    186 	  Methods can also be evaluated on variables, including chaining:
    187 	    $x.Method1.Field
    188 	- The name of a niladic function, such as
    189 		fun
    190 	  The result is the value of invoking the function, fun(). The return
    191 	  types and values behave as in methods. Functions and function
    192 	  names are described below.
    193 	- A parenthesized instance of one the above, for grouping. The result
    194 	  may be accessed by a field or map key invocation.
    195 		print (.F1 arg1) (.F2 arg2)
    196 		(.StructValuedMethod "arg").Field
    197 
    198 Arguments may evaluate to any type; if they are pointers the implementation
    199 automatically indirects to the base type when required.
    200 If an evaluation yields a function value, such as a function-valued
    201 field of a struct, the function is not invoked automatically, but it
    202 can be used as a truth value for an if action and the like. To invoke
    203 it, use the call function, defined below.
    204 
    205 Pipelines
    206 
    207 A pipeline is a possibly chained sequence of "commands". A command is a simple
    208 value (argument) or a function or method call, possibly with multiple arguments:
    209 
    210 	Argument
    211 		The result is the value of evaluating the argument.
    212 	.Method [Argument...]
    213 		The method can be alone or the last element of a chain but,
    214 		unlike methods in the middle of a chain, it can take arguments.
    215 		The result is the value of calling the method with the
    216 		arguments:
    217 			dot.Method(Argument1, etc.)
    218 	functionName [Argument...]
    219 		The result is the value of calling the function associated
    220 		with the name:
    221 			function(Argument1, etc.)
    222 		Functions and function names are described below.
    223 
    224 A pipeline may be "chained" by separating a sequence of commands with pipeline
    225 characters '|'. In a chained pipeline, the result of each command is
    226 passed as the last argument of the following command. The output of the final
    227 command in the pipeline is the value of the pipeline.
    228 
    229 The output of a command will be either one value or two values, the second of
    230 which has type error. If that second value is present and evaluates to
    231 non-nil, execution terminates and the error is returned to the caller of
    232 Execute.
    233 
    234 Variables
    235 
    236 A pipeline inside an action may initialize a variable to capture the result.
    237 The initialization has syntax
    238 
    239 	$variable := pipeline
    240 
    241 where $variable is the name of the variable. An action that declares a
    242 variable produces no output.
    243 
    244 If a "range" action initializes a variable, the variable is set to the
    245 successive elements of the iteration. Also, a "range" may declare two
    246 variables, separated by a comma:
    247 
    248 	range $index, $element := pipeline
    249 
    250 in which case $index and $element are set to the successive values of the
    251 array/slice index or map key and element, respectively. Note that if there is
    252 only one variable, it is assigned the element; this is opposite to the
    253 convention in Go range clauses.
    254 
    255 A variable's scope extends to the "end" action of the control structure ("if",
    256 "with", or "range") in which it is declared, or to the end of the template if
    257 there is no such control structure. A template invocation does not inherit
    258 variables from the point of its invocation.
    259 
    260 When execution begins, $ is set to the data argument passed to Execute, that is,
    261 to the starting value of dot.
    262 
    263 Examples
    264 
    265 Here are some example one-line templates demonstrating pipelines and variables.
    266 All produce the quoted word "output":
    267 
    268 	{{"\"output\""}}
    269 		A string constant.
    270 	{{`"output"`}}
    271 		A raw string constant.
    272 	{{printf "%q" "output"}}
    273 		A function call.
    274 	{{"output" | printf "%q"}}
    275 		A function call whose final argument comes from the previous
    276 		command.
    277 	{{printf "%q" (print "out" "put")}}
    278 		A parenthesized argument.
    279 	{{"put" | printf "%s%s" "out" | printf "%q"}}
    280 		A more elaborate call.
    281 	{{"output" | printf "%s" | printf "%q"}}
    282 		A longer chain.
    283 	{{with "output"}}{{printf "%q" .}}{{end}}
    284 		A with action using dot.
    285 	{{with $x := "output" | printf "%q"}}{{$x}}{{end}}
    286 		A with action that creates and uses a variable.
    287 	{{with $x := "output"}}{{printf "%q" $x}}{{end}}
    288 		A with action that uses the variable in another action.
    289 	{{with $x := "output"}}{{$x | printf "%q"}}{{end}}
    290 		The same, but pipelined.
    291 
    292 Functions
    293 
    294 During execution functions are found in two function maps: first in the
    295 template, then in the global function map. By default, no functions are defined
    296 in the template but the Funcs method can be used to add them.
    297 
    298 Predefined global functions are named as follows.
    299 
    300 	and
    301 		Returns the boolean AND of its arguments by returning the
    302 		first empty argument or the last argument, that is,
    303 		"and x y" behaves as "if x then y else x". All the
    304 		arguments are evaluated.
    305 	call
    306 		Returns the result of calling the first argument, which
    307 		must be a function, with the remaining arguments as parameters.
    308 		Thus "call .X.Y 1 2" is, in Go notation, dot.X.Y(1, 2) where
    309 		Y is a func-valued field, map entry, or the like.
    310 		The first argument must be the result of an evaluation
    311 		that yields a value of function type (as distinct from
    312 		a predefined function such as print). The function must
    313 		return either one or two result values, the second of which
    314 		is of type error. If the arguments don't match the function
    315 		or the returned error value is non-nil, execution stops.
    316 	html
    317 		Returns the escaped HTML equivalent of the textual
    318 		representation of its arguments. This function is unavailable
    319 		in html/template, with a few exceptions.
    320 	index
    321 		Returns the result of indexing its first argument by the
    322 		following arguments. Thus "index x 1 2 3" is, in Go syntax,
    323 		x[1][2][3]. Each indexed item must be a map, slice, or array.
    324 	js
    325 		Returns the escaped JavaScript equivalent of the textual
    326 		representation of its arguments.
    327 	len
    328 		Returns the integer length of its argument.
    329 	not
    330 		Returns the boolean negation of its single argument.
    331 	or
    332 		Returns the boolean OR of its arguments by returning the
    333 		first non-empty argument or the last argument, that is,
    334 		"or x y" behaves as "if x then x else y". All the
    335 		arguments are evaluated.
    336 	print
    337 		An alias for fmt.Sprint
    338 	printf
    339 		An alias for fmt.Sprintf
    340 	println
    341 		An alias for fmt.Sprintln
    342 	urlquery
    343 		Returns the escaped value of the textual representation of
    344 		its arguments in a form suitable for embedding in a URL query.
    345 		This function is unavailable in html/template, with a few
    346 		exceptions.
    347 
    348 The boolean functions take any zero value to be false and a non-zero
    349 value to be true.
    350 
    351 There is also a set of binary comparison operators defined as
    352 functions:
    353 
    354 	eq
    355 		Returns the boolean truth of arg1 == arg2
    356 	ne
    357 		Returns the boolean truth of arg1 != arg2
    358 	lt
    359 		Returns the boolean truth of arg1 < arg2
    360 	le
    361 		Returns the boolean truth of arg1 <= arg2
    362 	gt
    363 		Returns the boolean truth of arg1 > arg2
    364 	ge
    365 		Returns the boolean truth of arg1 >= arg2
    366 
    367 For simpler multi-way equality tests, eq (only) accepts two or more
    368 arguments and compares the second and subsequent to the first,
    369 returning in effect
    370 
    371 	arg1==arg2 || arg1==arg3 || arg1==arg4 ...
    372 
    373 (Unlike with || in Go, however, eq is a function call and all the
    374 arguments will be evaluated.)
    375 
    376 The comparison functions work on basic types only (or named basic
    377 types, such as "type Celsius float32"). They implement the Go rules
    378 for comparison of values, except that size and exact type are
    379 ignored, so any integer value, signed or unsigned, may be compared
    380 with any other integer value. (The arithmetic value is compared,
    381 not the bit pattern, so all negative integers are less than all
    382 unsigned integers.) However, as usual, one may not compare an int
    383 with a float32 and so on.
    384 
    385 Associated templates
    386 
    387 Each template is named by a string specified when it is created. Also, each
    388 template is associated with zero or more other templates that it may invoke by
    389 name; such associations are transitive and form a name space of templates.
    390 
    391 A template may use a template invocation to instantiate another associated
    392 template; see the explanation of the "template" action above. The name must be
    393 that of a template associated with the template that contains the invocation.
    394 
    395 Nested template definitions
    396 
    397 When parsing a template, another template may be defined and associated with the
    398 template being parsed. Template definitions must appear at the top level of the
    399 template, much like global variables in a Go program.
    400 
    401 The syntax of such definitions is to surround each template declaration with a
    402 "define" and "end" action.
    403 
    404 The define action names the template being created by providing a string
    405 constant. Here is a simple example:
    406 
    407 	`{{define "T1"}}ONE{{end}}
    408 	{{define "T2"}}TWO{{end}}
    409 	{{define "T3"}}{{template "T1"}} {{template "T2"}}{{end}}
    410 	{{template "T3"}}`
    411 
    412 This defines two templates, T1 and T2, and a third T3 that invokes the other two
    413 when it is executed. Finally it invokes T3. If executed this template will
    414 produce the text
    415 
    416 	ONE TWO
    417 
    418 By construction, a template may reside in only one association. If it's
    419 necessary to have a template addressable from multiple associations, the
    420 template definition must be parsed multiple times to create distinct *Template
    421 values, or must be copied with the Clone or AddParseTree method.
    422 
    423 Parse may be called multiple times to assemble the various associated templates;
    424 see the ParseFiles and ParseGlob functions and methods for simple ways to parse
    425 related templates stored in files.
    426 
    427 A template may be executed directly or through ExecuteTemplate, which executes
    428 an associated template identified by name. To invoke our example above, we
    429 might write,
    430 
    431 	err := tmpl.Execute(os.Stdout, "no data needed")
    432 	if err != nil {
    433 		log.Fatalf("execution failed: %s", err)
    434 	}
    435 
    436 or to invoke a particular template explicitly by name,
    437 
    438 	err := tmpl.ExecuteTemplate(os.Stdout, "T2", "no data needed")
    439 	if err != nil {
    440 		log.Fatalf("execution failed: %s", err)
    441 	}
    442 
    443 */
    444 package template
    445