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Radius is a powerful tag-based template language for Ruby inspired by the template languages used in MovableType and TextPattern. It uses tags similar to XML, but can be used to generate any form of plain text (HTML, e-mail, etc…).
With Radius, it is extremely easy to create custom tags and parse them. Here’s a small example:
require 'radius' # Define tags on a context that will be available to a template: context = Radius::Context.new do |c| c.define_tag 'hello' do 'Hello world' end c.define_tag 'repeat' do |tag| number = (tag.attr['times'] || '1').to_i result = '' number.times { result << tag.expand } result end end # Create a parser to parse tags that begin with 'r:' parser = Radius::Parser.new(context, :tag_prefix => 'r') # Parse tags and output the result puts parser.parse(%{A small example:\n<r:repeat times="3">* <r:hello />!\n</r:repeat>})
Output:
A small example: * Hello world! * Hello world! * Hello world!
Read the QUICKSTART file to get up and running with Radius.
Radius does not have any external requirements for using the library in your own programs.
Ragel is required to create the ruby parser from the Ragel specification, and both Ragel and Graphviz are required to draw the state graph for the parser.
It is recommended that you install Radius using the RubyGems packaging system:
% gem install --remote radius
Radius is released under the MIT license and is copyright © 2006-2010 John W. Long. A copy of the MIT license can be found in the LICENSE file.
This is a prioritized roadmap for future releases:
-
Clean up the current code base. [Done]
-
Add support for multi-level contexts: tags should be able to be defined to only be valid within other sets of tags. [Done]
-
Create a simple DSL for defining contexts. [Done]
-
Optimize for speed, modify scan.rl to emit C.
The latest version of Radius can be found on RubyForge:
Experimental and development versions of Radius can be found on Github:
If you are interested in helping with the development of Radius, feel free to fork the project on GitHub and send me a pull request.
- John Long