Provided by: ruby-mustache_1.0.2-1_all bug

NAME

       mustache - Mustache processor

SYNOPSIS

       mustache <YAML> <FILE>
       mustache --compile <FILE>
       mustache --tokens <FILE>

DESCRIPTION

       Mustache is a logic-less templating system for HTML, config files, anything.

       The  mustache  command  processes  a  Mustache  template preceded by YAML frontmatter from
       standard input and prints one or more documents to standard output.

       YAML frontmatter begins with --- on a single line, followed by YAML, ending  with  another
       --- on a single line, e.g.

           ---
           names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
           ---

       If you are unfamiliar with YAML, it is a superset of JSON. Valid JSON should work fine.

       After  the  frontmatter  should  come  any valid Mustache template. See mustache(5) for an
       overview of Mustache templates.

       For example:

           {{#names}}
             Hi {{name}}!
           {{/names}}

       Now let´s combine them.

           $ cat data.yml
           ---
           names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
           ---

           $ cat template.mustache
           {{#names}}
             Hi {{name}}!
           {{/names}}

           $ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
           Hi chris!
           Hi mark!
           Hi scott!

       If you provide multiple YAML documents (as  delimited  by  ---),  your  template  will  be
       rendered multiple times. Like a mail merge.

       For example:

           $ cat data.yml
           ---
           name: chris
           ---
           name: mark
           ---
           name: scott
           ---

           $ cat template.mustache
           Hi {{name}}!

           $ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
           Hi chris!
           Hi mark!
           Hi scott!

OPTIONS

       By  default mustache will try to render a Mustache template using the YAML frontmatter you
       provide. It can do a few other things, however.

       -c, --compile
              Print the compiled Ruby version of a given template.  This  is  the  code  that  is
              actually  used  when  rendering  a template into a string. Useful for debugging but
              only if you are familiar with Mustache´s internals.

       -t, --tokens
              Print the tokenized form of  a  given  Mustache  template.  This  can  be  used  to
              understand  how  Mustache  parses  a template. The tokens are handed to a generator
              which compiles them into a Ruby string. Syntax errors and confused tags, therefore,
              can probably be identified by examining the tokens produced.

INSTALLATION

       If you have RubyGems installed:

           gem install mustache

EXAMPLES

       $ mustache data.yml template.mustache
       $ cat data.yml | mustache - template.mustache
       $ mustache -c template.mustache
       $ cat <<data | ruby mustache - template.mustache
       ---
       name: Bob
       age: 30
       ---
       data

COPYRIGHT

       Mustache is Copyright (C) 2009 Chris Wanstrath

       Original CTemplate by Google

SEE ALSO

       mustache(5), gem(1), http://mustache.github.io/