diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/text/template/helper.go')
-rw-r--r-- | src/text/template/helper.go | 178 |
1 files changed, 178 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/text/template/helper.go b/src/text/template/helper.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..48af392 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/text/template/helper.go @@ -0,0 +1,178 @@ +// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style +// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. + +// Helper functions to make constructing templates easier. + +package template + +import ( + "fmt" + "io/fs" + "os" + "path" + "path/filepath" +) + +// Functions and methods to parse templates. + +// Must is a helper that wraps a call to a function returning (*Template, error) +// and panics if the error is non-nil. It is intended for use in variable +// initializations such as +// +// var t = template.Must(template.New("name").Parse("text")) +func Must(t *Template, err error) *Template { + if err != nil { + panic(err) + } + return t +} + +// ParseFiles creates a new Template and parses the template definitions from +// the named files. The returned template's name will have the base name and +// parsed contents of the first file. There must be at least one file. +// If an error occurs, parsing stops and the returned *Template is nil. +// +// When parsing multiple files with the same name in different directories, +// the last one mentioned will be the one that results. +// For instance, ParseFiles("a/foo", "b/foo") stores "b/foo" as the template +// named "foo", while "a/foo" is unavailable. +func ParseFiles(filenames ...string) (*Template, error) { + return parseFiles(nil, readFileOS, filenames...) +} + +// ParseFiles parses the named files and associates the resulting templates with +// t. If an error occurs, parsing stops and the returned template is nil; +// otherwise it is t. There must be at least one file. +// Since the templates created by ParseFiles are named by the base +// names of the argument files, t should usually have the name of one +// of the (base) names of the files. If it does not, depending on t's +// contents before calling ParseFiles, t.Execute may fail. In that +// case use t.ExecuteTemplate to execute a valid template. +// +// When parsing multiple files with the same name in different directories, +// the last one mentioned will be the one that results. +func (t *Template) ParseFiles(filenames ...string) (*Template, error) { + t.init() + return parseFiles(t, readFileOS, filenames...) +} + +// parseFiles is the helper for the method and function. If the argument +// template is nil, it is created from the first file. +func parseFiles(t *Template, readFile func(string) (string, []byte, error), filenames ...string) (*Template, error) { + if len(filenames) == 0 { + // Not really a problem, but be consistent. + return nil, fmt.Errorf("template: no files named in call to ParseFiles") + } + for _, filename := range filenames { + name, b, err := readFile(filename) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + s := string(b) + // First template becomes return value if not already defined, + // and we use that one for subsequent New calls to associate + // all the templates together. Also, if this file has the same name + // as t, this file becomes the contents of t, so + // t, err := New(name).Funcs(xxx).ParseFiles(name) + // works. Otherwise we create a new template associated with t. + var tmpl *Template + if t == nil { + t = New(name) + } + if name == t.Name() { + tmpl = t + } else { + tmpl = t.New(name) + } + _, err = tmpl.Parse(s) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + } + return t, nil +} + +// ParseGlob creates a new Template and parses the template definitions from +// the files identified by the pattern. The files are matched according to the +// semantics of filepath.Match, and the pattern must match at least one file. +// The returned template will have the (base) name and (parsed) contents of the +// first file matched by the pattern. ParseGlob is equivalent to calling +// ParseFiles with the list of files matched by the pattern. +// +// When parsing multiple files with the same name in different directories, +// the last one mentioned will be the one that results. +func ParseGlob(pattern string) (*Template, error) { + return parseGlob(nil, pattern) +} + +// ParseGlob parses the template definitions in the files identified by the +// pattern and associates the resulting templates with t. The files are matched +// according to the semantics of filepath.Match, and the pattern must match at +// least one file. ParseGlob is equivalent to calling t.ParseFiles with the +// list of files matched by the pattern. +// +// When parsing multiple files with the same name in different directories, +// the last one mentioned will be the one that results. +func (t *Template) ParseGlob(pattern string) (*Template, error) { + t.init() + return parseGlob(t, pattern) +} + +// parseGlob is the implementation of the function and method ParseGlob. +func parseGlob(t *Template, pattern string) (*Template, error) { + filenames, err := filepath.Glob(pattern) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + if len(filenames) == 0 { + return nil, fmt.Errorf("template: pattern matches no files: %#q", pattern) + } + return parseFiles(t, readFileOS, filenames...) +} + +// ParseFS is like ParseFiles or ParseGlob but reads from the file system fsys +// instead of the host operating system's file system. +// It accepts a list of glob patterns. +// (Note that most file names serve as glob patterns matching only themselves.) +func ParseFS(fsys fs.FS, patterns ...string) (*Template, error) { + return parseFS(nil, fsys, patterns) +} + +// ParseFS is like ParseFiles or ParseGlob but reads from the file system fsys +// instead of the host operating system's file system. +// It accepts a list of glob patterns. +// (Note that most file names serve as glob patterns matching only themselves.) +func (t *Template) ParseFS(fsys fs.FS, patterns ...string) (*Template, error) { + t.init() + return parseFS(t, fsys, patterns) +} + +func parseFS(t *Template, fsys fs.FS, patterns []string) (*Template, error) { + var filenames []string + for _, pattern := range patterns { + list, err := fs.Glob(fsys, pattern) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + if len(list) == 0 { + return nil, fmt.Errorf("template: pattern matches no files: %#q", pattern) + } + filenames = append(filenames, list...) + } + return parseFiles(t, readFileFS(fsys), filenames...) +} + +func readFileOS(file string) (name string, b []byte, err error) { + name = filepath.Base(file) + b, err = os.ReadFile(file) + return +} + +func readFileFS(fsys fs.FS) func(string) (string, []byte, error) { + return func(file string) (name string, b []byte, err error) { + name = path.Base(file) + b, err = fs.ReadFile(fsys, file) + return + } +} |