Taggart is a generation library for tag-based markup (HTML, XML, SGML, etc.). It is useful for times when you just want code and functions, not templates. We already have great composition and abstraction tools in Elixir. Why not use them? With this approach, template composition through smaller component functions should be easy.
There is a blog post with an introduction and more documentation.
The package can be installed by adding taggart
to your list of
dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:taggart, "~> 0.1.5"}
]
end
Taggart produce Phoenix-compatible "safe" html through underlying usage of the
Phoenix.HTML.content_tag/2
.
Since it just produces IO Lists, it should remain compatible with any
other library that uses the same format.
Taggart supports a number of different syntaxes:
use Taggart.HTML
div("Name")
div("Name", class: "bold")
div(class: "bold", do: "Name")
div do
end
div(class: "bold", do: "Name")
div(class: "bold") do
"Name"
end
a(href: "#bottom", class: "uk-button uk-button-default", "i-am-a-boolean": true), do: "Click me!"
You can nest and combine in expected ways:
use Taggart.HTML
name = "Susan"
age = 27
html do
body do
div do
h2 "Buyer"
p name, class: "name"
p age, class: "age"
end
div do
"Welcome"
end
end
end
You can embed Taggart inside Phoenix helpers using Taggart.taggart/1
to create IO List without creating a top-level wrapping tag.
use Taggart.HTML
form = form_for(conn, "/users", [as: :user], fn f ->
taggart do
label do
"Name:"
end
label do
"Age:"
end
submit("Submit")
end
end)
use Taggart.HTML
html do
body do
div do
h3 "Person"
p name, class: "name"
p 2 * 19, class: "age"
form_for(build_conn(), "/users", [as: :user], fn f ->
taggart do
label do
"Name:"
text_input(f, :name)
end
label do
"Age:"
select(f, :age, 18..100)
end
submit("Submit")
end
end)
end
end
end
Phoenix views are just functions, so it’s possible to use pattern matching directly in a view to render your pages.
defmodule TaggartDemo.PageView do
use TaggartDemoWeb, :view
use Taggart.HTML
def render("index.html", assigns) do
taggart do
render_header("My Fancy Title")
render_body
render_footer
end
end
def render_header(title) do
header do
h1 title
end
end
def render_body do
main do
ul do
for i <- 1..3, do: list_item(x)
end
end
end
def render_footer do
footer do
"So Long Folks!!!"
end
end
def list_item(x) do
"Name: "
li(x)
end
end
The current design allows for a very flexible call structure. However, do
not be tempted to think of these as normal functions. They are currently
implemented as macros. This allows the do end
blocks to processed as
if they were a list:
div do
"item 1"
"item 2"
end
The alternative would be forcing the use of actual lists, which is necessairly noisier.
# Not valid, do not try:
div [
"Item 1",
"Item 2"
]
The trade-off, however, is that because the macros inspect the arguements
to determine attr/content
placement, they do not play well with all kinds
of ASTs.
This will work:
# works
a = "foo"
div(a)
This will not:
# do not try this at home
a = [id: "foo", class: "bar"]
div(a)
If you try this, you will get an error along the lines of
lists in Phoenix.HTML and templates may only contain integers representing bytes, binaries or other list
. This is because we
make the choice of assuming that a single, non-list argument
(of which AST is) is content and not attrs.
As a workaround, you can either use Phoenix.HTML.content_tag
directly, or use the special three-argument version which
ignores the first argument:
# try this
a = [id: "foo", class: "bar"]
div(nil, a) do "content" end
You can use the online tool at prestochange.io.
brew install ijcd/tap/taggart
Reads HTML from stdin and writes Taggart to stdout.
Usage:
taggart --indent <n|tabs>
taggart --help
Options:
-h --help Show this message.
--indent Either n (number of spaces to indent) or "tabs"
mix escript.build
./taggart
The design had two basic requirements:
- Simple Elixir-based generation of tag-based markup.
- Interoperate properly with Phoenix helpers.
I looked at and tried a few similar libraries (Eml, Marker), but either wasn't able to get them to work with Phoenix helpers or had problems with their approach (usage of @tag syntax in templates where it didn't refer to a module attribute). My goal was to keep things simple.
Taggart is released under the Apache License, Version 2.0.