Htmt 1.1.1
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Htmt --version 1.1.1
NuGet\Install-Package Htmt -Version 1.1.1
<PackageReference Include="Htmt" Version="1.1.1" />
paket add Htmt --version 1.1.1
#r "nuget: Htmt, 1.1.1"
// Install Htmt as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Htmt&version=1.1.1 // Install Htmt as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Htmt&version=1.1.1
Htmt
A simple templating language for .NET projects that is a superset of HTML/XML and is designed to be easy to read, write and have good editor support due to it being HTML/XML based and thus not needing any additional editor plugins. It fully supports trimming and native AOT compilation.
Example syntax
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title x:inner-text="{title}"></title>
</head>
<body>
<h1 x:inner-text="{title}"></h1>
<div class="posts" x:if="posts">
<div x:for="posts" x:as="post">
<h2>
<a x:href="/blog/{post.url}" x:inner-text="{post.title}"></a>
</h2>
<div x:inner-html="{post.body}"></div>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Note how in x:if
, x:for
and x:as
attributes the value is not enclosed in curly braces whereas in x:inner-text
and x:inner-html
it is.
That's because these attributes are not meant to be interpolated, but rather to be evaluated as expressions.
Attributes that are meant to be interpolated are enclosed in curly braces, like {title}
and {post.title}
,
which will be replaced with the value of the title
and post.title
keys in the data dictionary, respectively.
It also means you can add other text around the interpolation, like Hello, {name}!
.
Installation
dotnet add package Htmt
Usage
A simple example of how to use Htmt with default configuration to generate HTML output:
var template = "<h1 x:inner-text=\"{title}\"></h1>";
var data = new Dictionary<string, object> { { "title", "Hello, World!" } };
var parser = new Htmt.Parser { Template = template, Data = data };
var html = parser.ToHtml();
You can also generate XML output via the ToXml()
method.
Attributes
x:inner-text
Sets the inner text of the element to the value of the attribute.
Htmt template:
<h1 x:inner-text="{title}"></h1>
Results in:
<h1>Hello, World!</h1>
x:inner-html
Sets the inner HTML of the element to the value of the attribute.
Htmt template where content
is <p>Hello, World!</p>
:
<div x:inner-html="{content}"></div>
Results in:
<div>
<p>Hello, World!</p>
</div>
x:outer-text
Sets the outer text of the element to the value of the attribute. This is useful if you want to replace the entire element with text.
Htmt template where title
is Hello, World!
:
<h1 x:outer-text="{title}"></h1>
Results in:
Hello, World!
x:outer-html
Sets the outer HTML of the element to the value of the attribute. This is useful if you want to replace the entire element with HTML.
Htmt template where content
is <p>Hello, World!</p>
:
<div x:outer-html="{content}"></div>
Results in:
<p>Hello, World!</p>
x:if
Removes the element if the attribute is falsey.
Htmt template where show
is false
:
<div x:if="show">Hello, World!</div>
Results in:
x:unless
Removes the element if the attribute is truthy.
Htmt template where hide
is true
:
<div x:unless="hide">Hello, World!</div>
Results in:
x:for
Repeats the element for each item in the attribute.
Htmt template where items
is an array of strings:
<ul>
<li x:for="items" x:as="item" x:inner-text="{item}"></li>
</ul>
Results in:
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
Note that the x:as
attribute is optional. If you just want to loop over a data structure,
but you don't care about using the data of each individual iteration, you can omit it.
x:*
(Generic Value Attributes)
Above are all the special attributes that do some logical operation, but you can also use the x:*
attributes to set any attribute on an element to the value of the attribute.
For example, to set the href
attribute of an element, you can use the x:href
attribute:
<a x:href="/blog/{slug}">Hello, World!</a>
Results in:
<a href="/blog/hello-world">Hello, World!</a>
If slug
is hello-world
.
Extending
Attribute Parsers
You can add (or replace) attribute parsers in Htmt by adding them to the AttributeParsers
array,
when creating a new instance of the Parser
class.
var parser = new Htmt.Parser
{
Template = template,
Data = data,
AttributeParsers = [
new MyCustomAttributeParser()
]
};
A custom attribute parser must implement the IAttributeParser
interface:
public interface IAttributeParser
{
public string XTag { get; }
public void Parse(XmlDocument xml, Dictionary<string, object> data, XmlNodeList? nodes);
}
The Parse
method is where the attribute parser should do its work, and the XTag
property should return the xtag pattern for the nodes it should parse.
For example if you want to add a custom attribute parser for an attribute called x:custom
, you would do the following:
public class CustomAttributeParser : IAttributeParser
{
public string XTag => "//*[@x:custom]";
public void Parse(XmlDocument xml, Dictionary<string, object> data, XmlNodeList? nodes)
{
foreach (XmlNode node in nodes)
{
// all of the nodes are nodes that have the `x:custom` attribute,
// so you can do whatever you want with them here.
}
}
}
To get an array of default attribute parsers, you can call Htmt.Parser.DefaultAttributeParsers()
,
if you want to add your custom attribute parsers to the default ones. But you can also mix and match however you like.
List of built-in attribute parsers
Htmt.AttributeParsers.InnerTextAttributeParser
- Parses thex:inner-text
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.InnerHtmlAttributeParser
- Parses thex:inner-html
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.OuterTextAttributeParser
- Parses thex:outer-text
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.OuterHtmlAttributeParser
- Parses thex:outer-html
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.IfAttributeParser
- Parses thex:if
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.UnlessAttributeParser
- Parses thex:unless
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.ForAttributeParser
- Parses thex:for
attribute.Htmt.AttributeParsers.GenericValueAttributeParser
- Parses thex:*
attributes.
Limitations
Htmt is written on top of the System.Xml
namespace, which means it has the same limitations as XmlDocument
.
This means that some HTML that is otherwise allowed by the browsers will throw an error when parsed by Htmt.
For example, the following HTML will throw an error:
<img src="image.jpeg">
This is because the img
tag self-closes in HTML, but not in XML.
To fix this, you can add a closing tag like so:
<img src="image.jpeg" />
While a third-party library would probably solve this, my goal was to keep the library dependency-free and as simple as possible because I'm just one person and I want something that I can maintain easily for a long time.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net8.0 is compatible. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net8.0
- No dependencies.
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
2.3.2 | 99 | 11/7/2024 |
2.3.1 | 82 | 11/7/2024 |
2.3.0 | 77 | 11/7/2024 |
2.2.0 | 77 | 11/6/2024 |
2.1.3 | 91 | 11/3/2024 |
2.1.2 | 78 | 11/3/2024 |
2.1.1 | 79 | 11/3/2024 |
2.1.0 | 84 | 11/2/2024 |
2.0.1 | 74 | 10/29/2024 |
2.0.0 | 105 | 10/27/2024 |
1.2.2 | 76 | 10/22/2024 |
1.2.1 | 67 | 10/22/2024 |
1.2.0 | 101 | 10/20/2024 |
1.1.1 | 102 | 10/12/2024 |
1.1.0 | 82 | 10/12/2024 |
1.0.3 | 90 | 10/11/2024 |
1.0.1 | 84 | 10/11/2024 |
1.0.0 | 84 | 10/11/2024 |
The x:if and x:unless attributes now support IEnumerable and IDictionary checks.