ASPN ActiveState Programmer Network
ActiveState
/ Home / Perl / PHP / Python / Tcl / XSLT /
/ Safari / My ASPN /
Cookbooks | Documentation | Mailing Lists | Modules | News Feeds | Products | User Groups


Recent Messages
List Archives
About the List
List Leaders
Subscription Options

View Subscriptions
Help

View by Topic
ActiveState
.NET Framework
Open Source
Perl
PHP
Python
Tcl
Web Services
XML & XSLT

View by Category
Database
General
SOAP
System Administration
Tools
User Interfaces
Web Programming
XML Programming


MyASPN >> Mail Archive >> ruby-talk
ruby-talk
[ANN] tagz-4.2.0 - giraffe slayer
by Ara Howard other posts by this author
May 8 2008 11:39AM messages near this date
Re: windows prompt, how to write [ ] ? | Re: [ANN] tagz-4.2.0 - giraffe slayer
NAME

   tagz.rb

SYNOPSIS

   require Tagz

   include Tagz.globally

   a_(:href =>  "/foo"){ "bar" }  #=>  <a href="/foo">bar</a>

DESCRIPTION

   tagz.rb is generates html, xml, or any sgml variant like a small  
ninja
   running across the backs of a herd of giraffes swatting of heads  
like a
   mark-up weedwacker.  weighing in at less than 200 lines of code  
tagz.rb adds
   an html syntax to ruby that is both unobtrusive, safe, and available
   globally to objects without the need for any builder or superfluous  
objects.
   tagz.rb is designed for applications that generate html to be able  
to do so
   easily in any context without heavyweight syntax or scoping issues,  
like a
   ninja sword through butter.

INSTALL

   gem install tagz

HISTORY

   4.2.0
     - general lib cleanup
     - introduction of dual-mixin technique (Tagz.globally)
     - few small bug fixes
     - ninja tales
     - fixed div_{ false }

SAMPLES

   <========< samples/a.rb > ========>

   ~ >  cat samples/a.rb

     #
     # in the simplest case tagz generates html using a syntax which  
safely mixes
     # in to any object
     #

     require 'tagz'
     include Tagz.globally

     class GiraffeModel
       def link
         a_(:href =>  "/giraffe/neck/42"){ "whack!" }
       end
     end

     puts GiraffeModel.new.link

   ~ >  ruby samples/a.rb

     <a href="/giraffe/neck/42"> whack!</a>


   <========< samples/b.rb > ========>

   ~ >  cat samples/b.rb

     #
     # tagz.rb mixes quite easily with your favourite templating  
engine, avoiding
     # the need for '<% rows.each do |row| %>  ... <% row.each do | 
cell| %>  '
     # madness and other types of logic to be coded in the templating  
language,
     # leaving templating to template engines and logic and looping to  
ruby -
     # unencumbered by extra funky syntax
     #

     require 'tagz'
     include Tagz.globally

     require 'erb'

     rows = %w( a b c ), %w( 1 2 3 )

     template = ERB.new <<-ERB
       <html> 
         <body> 
           <%=

             if rows

               table_{
                 rows.each do |row|
                   tr_{
                     row.each do |cell|
                       td_{ cell }
                     end
                   }
                 end
               }

             end

           %> 
         </body> 
       </html> 
     ERB

     puts template.result(binding)


   ~ >  ruby samples/b.rb

       <html> 
         <body> 
           <table> <tr><td>a</td><td>b</td><td>c</td></tr><tr><td>1</ 
td> <td>2</td><td>3</td></tr></table>
         </body> 
       </html> 


   <========< samples/c.rb > ========>

   ~ >  cat samples/c.rb

     #
     # once you've learned to generate html using tagz you're primed  
to generate
     # xml too
     #

     require 'tagz'
     include Tagz.globally

     doc =
       xml_{
         giraffe_{ 'large' }
         ninja_{ 'small' }
       }

     puts doc

   ~ >  ruby samples/c.rb

     <xml> <giraffe>large</giraffe><ninja>small</ninja></xml>


   <========< samples/d.rb > ========>

   ~ >  cat samples/d.rb

     #
     # tagz.rb doesn't cramp your style, allowing even invalid html to  
be
     # generated.  note the use of the 'tagz' method, which can be  
used both to
     # capture output and to append content to the top of the stack.
     #

     require 'tagz'
     include Tagz.globally

     def header
       tagz{
         html_
           body_(:class =>  'ninja-like', :id => 'giraffe-slayer')

           tagz << "\n<!-- this is the header --> \n"
       }
     end

     def footer
       tagz{
         tagz << "\n<!-- this is the footer --> \n"

         body_
           html_
       }
     end

     puts header, footer

   ~ >  ruby samples/d.rb

     <html> <body class="ninja-like" id="giraffe-slayer">
     <!-- this is the header --> 

     <!-- this is the footer --> 
     <body> <html>


   <========< samples/e.rb > ========>

   ~ >  cat samples/e.rb

     #
     # tagz.rb allows a safer method of mixin which requires any tagz  
methods to be
     # inside a tagz block - tagz generating methods outside a tagz  
block will
     # raise an error if tagz is included this way.  also notice that  
the error is
     # reported from where it was raised - not from the bowels of the  
the tagz.rb
     # lib.
     #

     require 'tagz'
     include Tagz

     puts tagz{
      html_{ 'works only in here' }
     }

     begin
       html_{ 'not out here' }
     rescue Object =>  e
       p :backtrace =>  e.backtrace
     end


   ~ >  ruby samples/e.rb

     <html> works only in here</html>
     {:backtrace=> ["samples/e.rb:17"]}


   <========< samples/f.rb > ========>

   ~ >  cat samples/f.rb

     #
     # tagz.rb can generate really compact html.  this is great to  
save bandwidth
     # but can sometimes make reading the generated html a bit rough.   
of course
     # using tidy or the dom inspector in firebug obviates the issue;  
nevertheless
     # it's sometime nice to break things up a little.  you can use  
'tagz << "\n"'
     # or the special shorthand '__' to accomplish this
     #

     require 'tagz'
     include Tagz.globally

     p div_{
       span_{ true }
       __
       span_{ false }  # hey ryan, i fixed this ;-)
       __
     }

   ~ >  ruby samples/f.rb

     "<div> <span>true</span>\n<span>false</span>\n</div>"



enjoy.


a @ http://codeforpeople.com/
--
we can deny everything, except that we have the possibility of being  
better. simply reflect on that.
h.h. the 14th dalai lama
Thread:
Ara Howard
M. Edward Borasky
Phillip Gawlowski
Tim Pease
Adam Shelly
Matt Neuburg
Ara.T.Howard
Ara.T.Howard
Ara.T.Howard

Privacy Policy | Email Opt-out | Feedback | Syndication
© 2004 ActiveState, a division of Sophos All rights reserved