Text Placeholder is a minimalistic text template engine designed for the manipulation of named placeholders within textual templates.
This library operates based on two primary elements:
-
Placeholders: Defined markers within the text templates intended to be replaced by actual content in the final rendition.
-
Context: The precise data set used for the replacement of placeholders during the template rendering process.
For use within a no_std environment, Text
Placeholder can be configured by disabling
the default features.
This allows the library to maintain compatibility with no_std specifications.
Placeholders are defined within certain boundaries and will be replaced once the template is parsed.
Let's define a template with placeholders named first and second:
let template = Template::new("Hello {{first}} {{second}}!");Templates use the handlebars syntax as boundaries by default, but can be overridden:
let template = Template::new_with_placeholder("Hello $[first] $[second]!", "$[", "]");Context is the data structure that will be used to replace your placeholders with real data.
You can think of your placeholder as a key within a HashMap or the name of a field within a
struct. In fact, these are the three types of context supported by this library:
- HashMap.
- A function
- Struct, as an optional feature.
Each placeholder should be a key with an associated value that can be converted into a str.
The following methods are available with a HashMap:
fill_with_hashmap- replaces missing placeholders with an empty string.
- replaces placeholders that cannot be converted to a strint with an empty string.
fill_with_hashmap_strictwhich returns aError::PlaceholderErrorwhen:- a placeholder is missing.
- a placeholder value cannot be converted to a string.
use text_placeholder::Template;
use std::collections::HashMap; // or for no_std `use hashbrown::HashMap;`
let default_template = Template::new("Hello {{first}} {{second}}!");
let mut table = HashMap::new();
table.insert("first", "text");
table.insert("second", "placeholder");
assert_eq!(default_template.fill_with_hashmap(&table), "Hello text placeholder!");
// We can also specify our own boundaries:
let custom_template = Template::new_with_placeholder("Hello $[first]] $[second]!", "$[", "]");
assert_eq!(default_template.fill_with_hashmap(&table), "Hello text placeholder!");This uses a function to generate the substitution value. The value could be extracted from a HashMap or BTreeMap, read from a config file or database, or purely computed from the key itself.
The function takes a key and returns an Option<Cow<str>> - that is it can return a borrowed
&str, an owned String or no value. Returning no value causes fill_with_function to fail (it's
the equivalent of fill_with_hashmap_strict in this way).
The function actually a FnMut closure, so it can also modify external state, such as keeping track
of which key values were used. key has a lifetime borrowed from the template, so it can be
stored outside of the closure.
use text_placeholder::Template;
use std::borrow::Cow;
let template = Template::new("Hello {{first}} {{second}}!");
let mut idx = 0;
assert_eq!(
&*template.fill_with_function(
|key| {
idx += 1;
Some(Cow::Owned(format!("{key}-{idx}")))
})
.unwrap(),
"Hello first-1 second-2!"
);
assert_eq!(idx, 2);Allow structs that implement the serde::Serialize trait to be used as context.
This is an optional feature that depends on serde. In order to enable it add the following to your
Cargo.toml file:
[dependencies]
text_placeholder = { version = "0.4", features = ["struct_context"] }Each placeholder should be a field in your struct with an associated value that can be
converted into a str.
The following methods are available with a struct:
fill_with_struct- replaces missing placeholders with an empty string.
- replaces placeholders that cannot be converted to a strint with an empty string.
fill_with_struct_strictwhich returns aError::PlaceholderErrorwhen:- a placeholder is missing.
- a placeholder value cannot be converted to a string.
use text_placeholder::Template;
#[derive(Serialize)]
struct Context {
first: String,
second: String
}
let default_template = Template::new("Hello {{first}} {{second}}!");
let context = Context { first: "text".to_string(), second: "placeholder".to_string() };
assert_eq!(default_template.fill_with_struct(&context), "Hello text placeholder!");
// We can also specify our own boundaries:
let custom_template = Template::new_with_placeholder("Hello $[first]] $[second]!", "$[", "]");
assert_eq!(default_template.fill_with_struct(&context), "Hello text placeholder!");