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authoranomal00us <95467104+anomal00us@users.noreply.github.com>2022-07-26 22:51:26 +0200
committerroot <root@delphi.lan>2022-08-08 21:08:57 +0200
commitd17d6885f9b58b0faed4f5270b0e11e7eab34928 (patch)
treec0cd99a48b49264475177fba10aa800a8996214d
parent3f33715739cb3de3201bdccfcfc0e38cff50b820 (diff)
downloadmustache-spec-d17d6885f9b58b0faed4f5270b0e11e7eab34928.tar.gz
Adding pro to the if blocks approach
-rw-r--r--specs/~dynamic-names.json2
-rw-r--r--specs/~dynamic-names.yml3
2 files changed, 3 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/specs/~dynamic-names.json b/specs/~dynamic-names.json
index 044a41b..f4d0eab 100644
--- a/specs/~dynamic-names.json
+++ b/specs/~dynamic-names.json
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{
- "overview": "Rationale: this special notation was introduced primarily to allow the dynamic\nloading of partials. The main advantage that this notation offers is to allow\ndynamic loading of partials, which is particularly useful in cases where\npolymorphic data needs to be rendered in different ways, cases which would\notherwise be possible to render only with solutions that are convoluted,\ninefficient, or both.\nExample.\nLet's consider the following data:\n items: [\n { content: 'Hello, World!' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/foo.jpg' },\n { content: 'Some text' },\n { content: 'Some other text' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/bar.jpg' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/baz.jpg' },\n { content: 'Last text here' }\n ]\nThe goal is to render the different types of items in different ways: the\nitems having a key named `content` should be rendered with the template\n`text.mustache` and the items having a key named `url` should be rendered\nwith the template `image.mustache`:\ntext.mustache:\n {{!image.mustache}}\n <img src=\"{{url}}\"/>\nimage.mustache:\n {{!text.mustache}}\n {{content}}\nThere are already several ways to achieve this goal, here below are\nillustrated and discussed the most significant solutions to this problem.\n## Using Pre-Processing\nThe idea is to use a secondary templating mechanism to dynamically generate\nthe template that will be rendered.\nThe template that our secondary templating mechanism generates should look\nlike this:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{items.1.content}}\n <img src=\"{{items.2.url}}\"/>\n {{items.3.content}}\n {{items.4.content}}\n <img src=\"{{items.5.url}}\"/>\n <img src=\"{{items.6.url}}\"/>\n {{items.7.content}}\nThis solutions offers the advantages of having more control over the template\nand minimizing the template blocks to the essential ones.\nThe drawbacks are the rendering speed and the complexity that the secondary\ntemplating mechanism requires.\n## Using Lambdas\nThe idea is to inject into the data functions that will be later called from\nthe template.\nThis way the data will look like this:\n items: [\n {\n content: 'Hello, World!',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n },\n {\n url: 'http://example.com/foo.jpg',\n html: function() { return '{{>image}}'; }\n },\n {\n content: 'Some text',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n },\n {\n content: 'Some other text',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n },\n {\n url: 'http://example.com/bar.jpg',\n html: function() { return '{{>image}}'; }\n },\n {\n url: 'http://example.com/baz.jpg',\n html: function() { return '{{>image}}'; }\n },\n {\n content: 'Last text here',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n }\n ]\nAnd the template will look like this:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{#items}}\n {{{html}}}\n {{/items}}\nThe advantage this solution offers is to have a light main template.\nThe drawback is that the data needs to embed logic and template tags tags in\nit.\n## Using If Blocks\nThe idea is to put some logic into the main template so it can dynamically\nload templates:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{#items}}\n {{#url}}\n {{>image}}\n {{/url}}\n {{#content}}\n {{>text}}\n {{/content}}\n {{/items}}\nThe main advantage of this solution is that it works without adding any\noverhead fields to the data.\nThe drawback is that this solution isn't optimal for heterogeneous data sets\nas the main template grows linearly with the number of polymorphic variants.\n## Using Dynamic Names\nThis is the solution proposed by this spec.\nThe idea is to load partials dynamically.\nThis way the data items have to be tagged with the corresponding partial name:\n items: [\n { content: 'Hello, World!', dynamic: 'text' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/foo.jpg', dynamic: 'image' },\n { content: 'Some text', dynamic: 'text' },\n { content: 'Some other text', dynamic: 'text' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/bar.jpg', dynamic: 'image' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/baz.jpg', dynamic: 'image' },\n { content: 'Last text here', dynamic: 'text' }\n ]\nAnd the template would simple look like this:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{#items}}\n {{>*dynamic}}\n {{/items}}\nSummary:\n+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+\n| Approach | Pros | Cons |\n+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+\n| Pre-Processing | Essential template, | Secondary templating system needed, |\n| | more control | slower rendering |\n| Lambdas | Slim template | Data tagging, logic in data |\n| If Blocks | No data overhead | Template linear growth |\n| Dynamic Names | Slim template | Data tagging |\n+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+\n\nDynamic Names are a special notation to dynamically determine a tag's content.\n\nDynamic Names MUST be a non-whitespace character sequence NOT containing\nthe current closing delimiter. A Dynamic Name consists of an asterisk,\nfollowed by a dotted name. The dotted name follows the same notation as in an\nInterpolation tag.\n\nThis tag's dotted name, which is the Dynamic Name excluding the\nleading asterisk, references a key in the context whose value will be used in\nplace of the Dynamic Name itself as content of the tag. The dotted name\nresolution produces the same value as an Interpolation tag and does not affect\nthe context for further processing.\n\nSet Delimiter tags MUST NOT affect the resolution of a Dynamic Name. The\nDynamic Names MUST be resolved against the context stack local to the tag.\nFailed resolution of the dynamic name SHOULD result in nothing being rendered.\n\nEngines that implement Dynamic Names MUST support their use in Partial tags.\nIn engines that also implement the optional inheritance spec, Dynamic Names\ninside Parent tags SHOULD be supported as well. Dynamic Names cannot be\nresolved more than once (Dynamic Names cannot be nested).\n",
+ "overview": "Rationale: this special notation was introduced primarily to allow the dynamic\nloading of partials. The main advantage that this notation offers is to allow\ndynamic loading of partials, which is particularly useful in cases where\npolymorphic data needs to be rendered in different ways, cases which would\notherwise be possible to render only with solutions that are convoluted,\ninefficient, or both.\nExample.\nLet's consider the following data:\n items: [\n { content: 'Hello, World!' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/foo.jpg' },\n { content: 'Some text' },\n { content: 'Some other text' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/bar.jpg' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/baz.jpg' },\n { content: 'Last text here' }\n ]\nThe goal is to render the different types of items in different ways: the\nitems having a key named `content` should be rendered with the template\n`text.mustache` and the items having a key named `url` should be rendered\nwith the template `image.mustache`:\ntext.mustache:\n {{!image.mustache}}\n <img src=\"{{url}}\"/>\nimage.mustache:\n {{!text.mustache}}\n {{content}}\nThere are already several ways to achieve this goal, here below are\nillustrated and discussed the most significant solutions to this problem.\n## Using Pre-Processing\nThe idea is to use a secondary templating mechanism to dynamically generate\nthe template that will be rendered.\nThe template that our secondary templating mechanism generates should look\nlike this:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{items.1.content}}\n <img src=\"{{items.2.url}}\"/>\n {{items.3.content}}\n {{items.4.content}}\n <img src=\"{{items.5.url}}\"/>\n <img src=\"{{items.6.url}}\"/>\n {{items.7.content}}\nThis solutions offers the advantages of having more control over the template\nand minimizing the template blocks to the essential ones.\nThe drawbacks are the rendering speed and the complexity that the secondary\ntemplating mechanism requires.\n## Using Lambdas\nThe idea is to inject into the data functions that will be later called from\nthe template.\nThis way the data will look like this:\n items: [\n {\n content: 'Hello, World!',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n },\n {\n url: 'http://example.com/foo.jpg',\n html: function() { return '{{>image}}'; }\n },\n {\n content: 'Some text',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n },\n {\n content: 'Some other text',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n },\n {\n url: 'http://example.com/bar.jpg',\n html: function() { return '{{>image}}'; }\n },\n {\n url: 'http://example.com/baz.jpg',\n html: function() { return '{{>image}}'; }\n },\n {\n content: 'Last text here',\n html: function() { return '{{>text}}'; }\n }\n ]\nAnd the template will look like this:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{#items}}\n {{{html}}}\n {{/items}}\nThe advantage this solution offers is to have a light main template.\nThe drawback is that the data needs to embed logic and template tags tags in\nit.\n## Using If Blocks\nThe idea is to put some logic into the main template so it can dynamically\nload templates:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{#items}}\n {{#url}}\n {{>image}}\n {{/url}}\n {{#content}}\n {{>text}}\n {{/content}}\n {{/items}}\nThe main advantage of this solution is that it works without adding any\noverhead fields to the data.\nThe drawback is that this solution isn't optimal for heterogeneous data sets\nas the main template grows linearly with the number of polymorphic variants.\n## Using Dynamic Names\nThis is the solution proposed by this spec.\nThe idea is to load partials dynamically.\nThis way the data items have to be tagged with the corresponding partial name:\n items: [\n { content: 'Hello, World!', dynamic: 'text' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/foo.jpg', dynamic: 'image' },\n { content: 'Some text', dynamic: 'text' },\n { content: 'Some other text', dynamic: 'text' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/bar.jpg', dynamic: 'image' },\n { url: 'http://example.com/baz.jpg', dynamic: 'image' },\n { content: 'Last text here', dynamic: 'text' }\n ]\nAnd the template would simple look like this:\n {{!template.mustache}}\n {{#items}}\n {{>*dynamic}}\n {{/items}}\nSummary:\n+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+\n| Approach | Pros | Cons |\n+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+\n| Pre-Processing | Essential template, | Secondary templating system needed, |\n| | more control | slower rendering |\n| Lambdas | Slim template | Data tagging, logic in data |\n| If Blocks | No data overhead, | Template linear growth |\n| | self-documenting | |\n| Dynamic Names | Slim template | Data tagging |\n+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+\n\nDynamic Names are a special notation to dynamically determine a tag's content.\n\nDynamic Names MUST be a non-whitespace character sequence NOT containing\nthe current closing delimiter. A Dynamic Name consists of an asterisk,\nfollowed by a dotted name. The dotted name follows the same notation as in an\nInterpolation tag.\n\nThis tag's dotted name, which is the Dynamic Name excluding the\nleading asterisk, references a key in the context whose value will be used in\nplace of the Dynamic Name itself as content of the tag. The dotted name\nresolution produces the same value as an Interpolation tag and does not affect\nthe context for further processing.\n\nSet Delimiter tags MUST NOT affect the resolution of a Dynamic Name. The\nDynamic Names MUST be resolved against the context stack local to the tag.\nFailed resolution of the dynamic name SHOULD result in nothing being rendered.\n\nEngines that implement Dynamic Names MUST support their use in Partial tags.\nIn engines that also implement the optional inheritance spec, Dynamic Names\ninside Parent tags SHOULD be supported as well. Dynamic Names cannot be\nresolved more than once (Dynamic Names cannot be nested).\n",
"tests": [
{
"name": "Basic Behavior - Partial",
diff --git a/specs/~dynamic-names.yml b/specs/~dynamic-names.yml
index 27c4419..30edc39 100644
--- a/specs/~dynamic-names.yml
+++ b/specs/~dynamic-names.yml
@@ -128,7 +128,8 @@ overview: |
| Pre-Processing | Essential template, | Secondary templating system needed, |
| | more control | slower rendering |
| Lambdas | Slim template | Data tagging, logic in data |
- | If Blocks | No data overhead | Template linear growth |
+ | If Blocks | No data overhead, | Template linear growth |
+ | | self-documenting | |
| Dynamic Names | Slim template | Data tagging |
+----------------+---------------------+-------------------------------------+