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.. include:: rstcommon.rst .. default-role:: code .. contents::
A Source Code Filter (SCF)
transforms the input character stream to an in-memory
output stream before parsing. A filter can be used to provide templating
systems or preprocessors.
To use a filter for a source file the #?
notation is used:
#? stdtmpl(subsChar = '$', metaChar = '#')
#proc generateXML(name, age: string): string =
# result = ""
<xml>
<name>$name</name>
<age>$age</age>
</xml>
As the example shows, passing arguments to a filter can be done
just like an ordinary procedure call with named or positional arguments. The
available parameters depend on the invoked filter. Before version 0.12.0 of
the language #!
was used instead of #?
.
Hint: With --hint:codeBegin:on
:option: or --verbosity:2
:option:
(or higher) while compiling or nim check
:cmd:, Nim lists the processed code after
each filter application.
First, put your SCF code in a separate file with filters specified in the first line.
Note: You can name your SCF file with any file extension you want, but the
conventional extension is .nimf
(it used to be .tmpl
but that was too generic, for example preventing github to
recognize it as Nim source file).
If we use generateXML
code shown above and call the SCF file xmlGen.nimf
In your main.nim
:
include "xmlGen.nimf"
echo generateXML("John Smith","42")
Filters can be combined with the |
pipe operator:
#? strip(startswith="<") | stdtmpl
#proc generateXML(name, age: string): string =
# result = ""
<xml>
<name>$name</name>
<age>$age</age>
</xml>
The replace filter replaces substrings in each line.
Parameters and their defaults:
sub: string = ""
: the substring that is searched for
by: string = ""
: the string the substring is replaced with
The strip filter simply removes leading and trailing whitespace from each line.
Parameters and their defaults:
startswith: string = ""
: strip only the lines that start with startswith (ignoring leading whitespace). If empty every line is stripped.
leading: bool = true
: strip leading whitespace
trailing: bool = true
: strip trailing whitespace
The stdtmpl filter provides a simple templating engine for Nim. The
filter uses a line based parser: Lines prefixed with a meta character
(default: #
) contain Nim code, other lines are verbatim. Because
indentation-based parsing is not suited for a templating engine, control flow
statements need end X
delimiters.
Parameters and their defaults:
metaChar: char = '#'
: prefix for a line that contains Nim code
subsChar: char = '$'
: prefix for a Nim expression within a template line
conc: string = " & "
: the operation for concatenation
emit: string = "result.add"
: the operation to emit a string literal
toString: string = "$"
: the operation that is applied to each expression
Example:
#? stdtmpl | standard
#proc generateHTMLPage(title, currentTab, content: string,
# tabs: openArray[string]): string =
# result = ""
<head><title>$title</title></head>
<body>
<div id="menu">
<ul>
#for tab in items(tabs):
#if currentTab == tab:
<li><a id="selected"
#else:
<li><a
#end if
href="${tab}.html">$tab</a></li>
#end for
</ul>
</div>
<div id="content">
$content
A dollar: $$.
</div>
</body>
The filter transforms this into:
proc generateHTMLPage(title, currentTab, content: string,
tabs: openArray[string]): string =
result = ""
result.add("<head><title>" & $(title) & "</title></head>\n" &
"<body>\n" &
" <div id=\"menu\">\n" &
" <ul>\n")
for tab in items(tabs):
if currentTab == tab:
result.add(" <li><a id=\"selected\" \n")
else:
result.add(" <li><a\n")
#end
result.add(" href=\"" & $(tab) & ".html\">" & $(tab) & "</a></li>\n")
#end
result.add(" </ul>\n" &
" </div>\n" &
" <div id=\"content\">\n" &
" " & $(content) & "\n" &
" A dollar: $.\n" &
" </div>\n" &
"</body>\n")
Each line that does not start with the meta character (ignoring leading
whitespace) is converted to a string literal that is added to result
.
The substitution character introduces a Nim expression e within the
string literal. e is converted to a string with the toString operation
which defaults to $
. For strong type checking, set toString
to the
empty string. e must match this PEG pattern:
e <- [a-zA-Z\128-\255][a-zA-Z0-9\128-\255_.]* / '{' x '}'
x <- '{' x+ '}' / [^}]*
To produce a single substitution character it has to be doubled: $$
produces $
.
The template engine is quite flexible. It is easy to produce a procedure that writes the template code directly to a file:
#? stdtmpl(emit="f.write") | standard
#proc writeHTMLPage(f: File, title, currentTab, content: string,
# tabs: openArray[string]) =
<head><title>$title</title></head>
<body>
<div id="menu">
<ul>
#for tab in items(tabs):
#if currentTab == tab:
<li><a id="selected"
#else:
<li><a
#end if
href="${tab}.html" title = "$title - $tab">$tab</a></li>
#end for
</ul>
</div>
<div id="content">
$content
A dollar: $$.
</div>
</body>