Liquid alternatives and similar gems
Based on the "Template Engine" category.
Alternatively, view Liquid alternatives based on common mentions on social networks and blogs.
-
Slim
Slim is a template language whose goal is to reduce the syntax to the essential parts without becoming cryptic. -
Curly
The Curly template language allows separating your logic from the structure of your HTML templates.
Scout Monitoring - Performance metrics and, now, Logs Management Monitoring with Scout Monitoring
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README
Liquid template engine
- [Contributing guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md)
- [Version history](History.md)
- Liquid documentation from Shopify
- Liquid Wiki at GitHub
- Website
Introduction
Liquid is a template engine which was written with very specific requirements:
- It has to have beautiful and simple markup. Template engines which don't produce good looking markup are no fun to use.
- It needs to be non evaling and secure. Liquid templates are made so that users can edit them. You don't want to run code on your server which your users wrote.
- It has to be stateless. Compile and render steps have to be separate so that the expensive parsing and compiling can be done once and later on you can just render it passing in a hash with local variables and objects.
Why you should use Liquid
- You want to allow your users to edit the appearance of your application but don't want them to run insecure code on your server.
- You want to render templates directly from the database.
- You like smarty (PHP) style template engines.
- You need a template engine which does HTML just as well as emails.
- You don't like the markup of your current templating engine.
What does it look like?
<ul id="products">
{% for product in products %}
<li>
<h2>{{ product.name }}</h2>
Only {{ product.price | price }}
{{ product.description | prettyprint | paragraph }}
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
How to use Liquid
Install Liquid by adding gem 'liquid'
to your gemfile.
Liquid supports a very simple API based around the Liquid::Template class. For standard use you can just pass it the content of a file and call render with a parameters hash.
@template = Liquid::Template.parse("hi {{name}}") # Parses and compiles the template
@template.render('name' => 'tobi') # => "hi tobi"
Error Modes
Setting the error mode of Liquid lets you specify how strictly you want your templates to be interpreted. Normally the parser is very lax and will accept almost anything without error. Unfortunately this can make it very hard to debug and can lead to unexpected behaviour.
Liquid also comes with a stricter parser that can be used when editing templates to give better error messages when templates are invalid. You can enable this new parser like this:
Liquid::Template.error_mode = :strict # Raises a SyntaxError when invalid syntax is used
Liquid::Template.error_mode = :warn # Adds strict errors to template.errors but continues as normal
Liquid::Template.error_mode = :lax # The default mode, accepts almost anything.
If you want to set the error mode only on specific templates you can pass :error_mode
as an option to parse
:
Liquid::Template.parse(source, error_mode: :strict)
This is useful for doing things like enabling strict mode only in the theme editor.
It is recommended that you enable :strict
or :warn
mode on new apps to stop invalid templates from being created.
It is also recommended that you use it in the template editors of existing apps to give editors better error messages.
Undefined variables and filters
By default, the renderer doesn't raise or in any other way notify you if some variables or filters are missing, i.e. not passed to the render
method.
You can improve this situation by passing strict_variables: true
and/or strict_filters: true
options to the render
method.
When one of these options is set to true, all errors about undefined variables and undefined filters will be stored in errors
array of a Liquid::Template
instance.
Here are some examples:
template = Liquid::Template.parse("{{x}} {{y}} {{z.a}} {{z.b}}")
template.render({ 'x' => 1, 'z' => { 'a' => 2 } }, { strict_variables: true })
#=> '1 2 ' # when a variable is undefined, it's rendered as nil
template.errors
#=> [#<Liquid::UndefinedVariable: Liquid error: undefined variable y>, #<Liquid::UndefinedVariable: Liquid error: undefined variable b>]
template = Liquid::Template.parse("{{x | filter1 | upcase}}")
template.render({ 'x' => 'foo' }, { strict_filters: true })
#=> '' # when at least one filter in the filter chain is undefined, a whole expression is rendered as nil
template.errors
#=> [#<Liquid::UndefinedFilter: Liquid error: undefined filter filter1>]
If you want to raise on a first exception instead of pushing all of them in errors
, you can use render!
method:
template = Liquid::Template.parse("{{x}} {{y}}")
template.render!({ 'x' => 1}, { strict_variables: true })
#=> Liquid::UndefinedVariable: Liquid error: undefined variable y
Usage tracking
To help track usages of a feature or code path in production, we have released opt-in usage tracking. To enable this, we provide an empty Liquid:: Usage.increment
method which you can customize to your needs. The feature is well suited to https://github.com/Shopify/statsd-instrument. However, the choice of implementation is up to you.
Once you have enabled usage tracking, we recommend reporting any events through Github Issues that your system may be logging. It is highly likely this event has been added to consider deprecating or improving code specific to this event, so please raise any concerns.