v/vlib/v/TEMPLATES.md

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V allows for easily using text templates, expanded at compile time to
V functions, that efficiently produce text output. This is especially
usefull for templated HTML views, but the mechanism is general enough
to be used for other kinds of text output also.
# Template directives
Each template directive begins with an `@` sign.
Some directives contain a `{}` block, others only have `''` (string) parameters.
Newlines on the beginning and end are ignored in `{}` blocks,
otherwise this (see [if](#if) for this syntax):
```html
@if bool_val {
<span>This is shown if bool_val is true</span>
}
```
... would output:
```html
<span>This is shown if bool_val is true</span>
```
... which is less readable.
## if
The if directive, consists of three parts, the `@if` tag, the condition (same syntax like in V)
and the `{}` block, where you can write html, which will be rendered if the condition is true:
```
@if <condition> {}
```
### Example
```html
@if bool_val {
<span>This is shown if bool_val is true</span>
}
```
One-liner:
```html
@if bool_val { <span>This is shown if bool_val is true</span> }
```
The first example would result in:
```html
<span>This is shown if bool_val is true</span>
```
... while the one-liner results in:
```html
<span>This is shown if bool_val is true</span>
```
## for
The for directive consists of three parts, the `@for` tag,
the condition (same syntax like in V) and the `{}` block,
where you can write text, rendered for each iteration of the loop:
```
@for <condition> {}
```
### Example for @for
```html
@for i, val in my_vals {
<span>$i - $val</span>
}
```
One-liner:
```html
@for i, val in my_vals { <span>$i - $val</span> }
```
The first example would result in:
```html
<span>0 - "First"</span>
<span>1 - "Second"</span>
<span>2 - "Third"</span>
...
```
... while the one-liner results in:
```html
<span>0 - "First"</span>
<span>1 - "Second"</span>
<span>2 - "Third"</span>
...
```
You can also write (and all other for condition syntaxes that are allowed in V):
```html
@for i = 0; i < 5; i++ {
<span>$i</span>
}
```
## include
The include directive is for including other html files (which will be processed as well)
and consists of two parts, the `@include` tag and a following `'<path>'` string.
The path parameter is relative to the `/templates` directory in the corresponding project.
### Example for the folder structure of a project using templates:
```
Project root
/templates
- index.html
/headers
- base.html
```
`index.html`
```html
<div>@include 'header/base'</div>
```
> Note that there shouldn't be a file suffix,
it is automatically appended and only allows `html` files.
## js
The js directive consists of two parts, the `@js` tag and `'<path>'` string,
where you can insert your src
```
@js '<url>'
```
### Example for the @js directive:
```html
@js 'myscripts.js'
```
# Variables
All variables, which are declared before the $tmpl can be used through the `@{my_var}` syntax.
It's also possible to use properties of structs here like `@{my_struct.prop}`.