Provided by: libtemplate-perl_2.27-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       Template::Manual::Variables - Template variables and code bindings

Template Variables

       A reference to a hash array may be passed as the second argument to the process() method, containing
       definitions of template variables. The "VARIABLES" (a.k.a. "PRE_DEFINE") option can also be used to pre-
       define variables for all templates processed by the object.

           my $tt = Template->new({
               VARIABLES => {
                   version => 3.14,
                   release => 'Sahara',
               },
           });

           my $vars = {
               serial_no => 271828,
           };

           $tt->process('myfile', $vars);

       myfile template:

           This is version [% version %] ([% release %]).
           Serial number: [% serial_no %]

       Generated Output:

           This is version 3.14 (Sahara)
           Serial number: 271828

       Variable names may contain any alphanumeric characters or underscores. They may be lower, upper or mixed
       case although the usual convention is to use lower case. The case is significant however, and '"foo"',
       '"Foo"' and '"FOO"' are all different variables. Upper case variable names are permitted, but not
       recommended due to a possible conflict with an existing or future reserved word.  As of version 2.00,
       these are:

           GET CALL SET DEFAULT INSERT INCLUDE PROCESS WRAPPER
           IF UNLESS ELSE ELSIF FOR FOREACH WHILE SWITCH CASE
           USE PLUGIN FILTER MACRO PERL RAWPERL BLOCK META
           TRY THROW CATCH FINAL NEXT LAST BREAK RETURN STOP
           CLEAR TO STEP AND OR NOT MOD DIV END

       The variable values may be of virtually any Perl type, including simple scalars, references to lists,
       hash arrays, subroutines or objects.  The Template Toolkit will automatically apply the correct procedure
       to accessing these values as they are used in the template.

       Example data:

           my $vars = {
               article => 'The Third Shoe',
               person  => {
                   id    => 314,
                   name  => 'Mr. Blue',
                   email => 'blue@nowhere.org',
               },
               primes  => [ 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13 ],
               wizard  => sub { return join(' ', 'Abracadabra!', @_) },
               cgi     => CGI->new('mode=submit&debug=1'),
           };

       Example template:

           [% article %]

           [% person.id %]: [% person.name %] <[% person.email %]>

           [% primes.first %] - [% primes.last %], including [% primes.3 %]
           [% primes.size %] prime numbers: [% primes.join(', ') %]

           [% wizard %]
           [% wizard('Hocus Pocus!') %]

           [% cgi.param('mode') %]

       Generated output:

           The Third Shoe

           314: Mr. Blue <blue@nowhere.org>

           2 - 13, including 7
           6 prime numbers: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13

           Abracadabra!
           Abracadabra! Hocus Pocus!

           submit

   Scalar Values
       Regular scalar variables are accessed by simply specifying their name.  As these are just entries in the
       top-level variable hash they can be considered special cases of hash array referencing as described
       below, with the main namespace hash automatically implied.

           [% article %]

   Hash Array References
       Members of hash arrays are accessed by specifying the hash reference and key separated by the dot '"."'
       operator.

       Example data:

           my $vars = {
               'home' => 'http://www.myserver.com/homepage.html',
               'page' => {
                   'this' => 'mypage.html',
                   'next' => 'nextpage.html',
                   'prev' => 'prevpage.html',
               },
           };

       Example template:

           <a href="[% home %]">Home</a>
           <a href="[% page.prev %]">Previous Page</a>
           <a href="[% page.next %]">Next Page</a>

       Generated output:

           <a href="http://www.myserver.com/homepage.html">Home</a>
           <a href="prevpage.html">Previous Page</a>
           <a href="nextpage.html">Next Page</a>

       Any key in a hash which starts with a '"_"' or '"."' character will be considered private and cannot be
       evaluated or updated from within a template.  The undefined value will be returned for any such variable
       accessed which the Template Toolkit will silently ignore (unless the "DEBUG" option is enabled).

       Example data:

           my $vars = {
               message => 'Hello World!',
               _secret => "On the Internet, no-one knows you're a dog",
               thing   => {
                   public    => 123,
                   _private  => 456,
                   '.hidden' => 789,
               },
           };

       Example template:

           [% message %]           # outputs "Hello World!"
           [% _secret %]           # no output
           [% thing.public %]      # outputs "123"
           [% thing._private %]    # no output
           [% thing..hidden %]     # ERROR: unexpected token (..)

       You can disable this feature by setting the $Template::Stash::PRIVATE package variable to a false value.

           $Template::Stash::PRIVATE = undef;   # now you can thing._private

       To access a hash entry using a key stored in another variable, prefix the key variable with '"$"' to have
       it interpolated before use (see "Variable Interpolation").

           [% pagename = 'next' %]
           [% page.$pagename %]       # same as [% page.next %]

       When you assign to a variable that contains multiple namespace elements (i.e. it has one or more '"."'
       characters in the name), any hashes required to represent intermediate namespaces will be created
       automatically.  In this following example, the "product" variable automatically springs into life as a
       hash array unless otherwise defined.

           [% product.id    = 'XYZ-2000'
              product.desc  = 'Bogon Generator'
              product.price = 666
           %]

           The [% product.id %] [% product.desc %]
           costs $[% product.price %].00

       Generated output:

           The XYZ-2000 Bogon Generator
           costs $666.00

       You can use Perl's familiar "{" ... "}" construct to explicitly create a hash and assign it to a
       variable.  Note that commas are optional between key/value pairs and "=" can be used in place of "=>".

           # minimal TT style
           [% product = {
                id    = 'XYZ-2000'
                desc  = 'Bogon Generator'
                price = 666
              }
           %]

           # perl style
           [% product = {
                id    => 'XYZ-2000',
                desc  => 'Bogon Generator',
                price => 666,
              }
           %]

   List References
       Items in lists are also accessed by use of the dot operator.

       Example data:

           my $vars = {
               people => [ 'Tom', 'Dick', 'Larry' ],
           };

       Example template:

           [% people.0 %]          # Tom
           [% people.1 %]          # Dick
           [% people.2 %]          # Larry

       The "FOREACH" directive can be used to iterate through items in a list.

           [% FOREACH person IN people %]
           Hello [% person %]
           [% END %]

       Generated output:

           Hello Tom
           Hello Dick
           Hello Larry

       Lists can be constructed in-situ using the regular anonymous list "[" ... "]" construct.  Commas between
       items are optional.

           [% cols = [ 'red', 'green', 'blue' ] %]

           [% FOREACH c IN cols %]
              [% c %]
           [% END %]

       or:

           [% FOREACH c IN [ 'red', 'green', 'blue' ] %]
              [% c %]
           [% END %]

       You can also create simple numerical sequences using the ".." range operator:

           [% n = [ 1 .. 4 ] %]    # n is [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]

           [% x = 4
              y = 8
              z = [x..y]           # z is [ 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ]
           %]

   Subroutines
       Template variables can contain references to Perl subroutines.  When the variable is used, the Template
       Toolkit will automatically call the subroutine, passing any additional arguments specified.  The return
       value from the subroutine is used as the variable value and inserted into the document output.

           my $vars = {
               wizard  => sub { return join(' ', 'Abracadabra!', @_) },
           };

       Example template:

           [% wizard %]                    # Abracadabra!
           [% wizard('Hocus Pocus!') %]    # Abracadabra! Hocus Pocus!

   Objects
       Template variables can also contain references to Perl objects.  Methods are called using the dot
       operator to specify the method against the object variable.  Additional arguments can be specified as
       with subroutines.

           use CGI;

           my $vars = {
               # hard coded CGI params for purpose of example
               cgi  => CGI->new('mode=submit&debug=1'),
           };

       Example template:

           [% FOREACH p IN cgi.param %]     # returns list of param keys
           [% p %] => [% cgi.param(p) %]   # fetch each param value
           [% END %]

       Generated output:

           mode => submit
           debug => 1

       Object methods can also be called as lvalues.  That is, they can appear on the left side of an
       assignment.  The method will be called passing the assigning value as an argument.

           [% myobj.method = 10 %]

       equivalent to:

           [% myobj.method(10) %]

   Passing Parameters and Returning Values
       Subroutines and methods will be passed any arguments specified in the template.  Any template variables
       in the argument list will first be evaluated and their resultant values passed to the code.

           my $vars = {
               mycode => sub { return 'received ' . join(', ', @_) },
           };

       template:

           [% foo = 10 %]
           [% mycode(foo, 20) %]       # received 10, 20

       Named parameters may also be specified.  These are automatically collected into a single hash array which
       is passed by reference as the last parameter to the sub-routine.  Named parameters can be specified using
       either "=>" or "=" and can appear anywhere in the argument list.

           my $vars = {
               myjoin => \&myjoin,
           };

           sub myjoin {
               # look for hash ref as last argument
               my $params = ref $_[-1] eq 'HASH' ? pop : { };
               return join($params->{ joint } || ' + ', @_);
           }

       Example template:

           [% myjoin(10, 20, 30) %]
           [% myjoin(10, 20, 30, joint = ' - ' %]
           [% myjoin(joint => ' * ', 10, 20, 30 %]

       Generated output:

           10 + 20 + 30
           10 - 20 - 30
           10 * 20 * 30

       Parenthesised parameters may be added to any element of a variable, not just those that are bound to code
       or object methods.  At present, parameters will be ignored if the variable isn't "callable" but are
       supported for future extensions.  Think of them as "hints" to that variable, rather than just arguments
       passed to a function.

           [% r = 'Romeo' %]
           [% r(100, 99, s, t, v) %]       # outputs "Romeo"

       User code should return a value for the variable it represents. This can be any of the Perl data types
       described above: a scalar, or reference to a list, hash, subroutine or object.  Where code returns a list
       of multiple values the items will automatically be folded into a list reference which can be accessed as
       per normal.

           my $vars = {
               # either is OK, first is recommended
               items1 => sub { return [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ] },
               items2 => sub { return ( 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ) },
           };

       Example template:

           [% FOREACH i IN items1 %]
              ...
           [% END %]

           [% FOREACH i IN items2 %]
              ...
           [% END %]

   Error Handling
       Errors can be reported from user code by calling "die()".  Errors raised in this way are caught by the
       Template Toolkit and converted to structured exceptions which can be handled from within the template.  A
       reference to the exception object is then available as the "error" variable.

           my $vars = {
               barf => sub {
                   die "a sick error has occurred\n";
               },
           };

       Example template:

           [% TRY %]
              [% barf %]       # calls sub which throws error via die()
           [% CATCH %]
              [% error.info %]     # outputs "a sick error has occurred\n"
           [% END %]

       Error messages thrown via "die()" are converted to exceptions of type "undef" (the literal string "undef"
       rather than the undefined value).  Exceptions of user-defined types can be thrown by calling "die()" with
       a reference to a Template::Exception object.

           use Template::Exception;

           my $vars = {
               login => sub {
                   ...do something...
                   die Template::Exception->new( badpwd => 'password too silly' );
               },
           };

       Example template:

           [% TRY %]
              [% login %]
           [% CATCH badpwd %]
              Bad password: [% error.info %]
           [% CATCH %]
              Some other '[% error.type %]' error: [% error.info %]
           [% END %]

       The exception types "stop" and "return" are used to implement the "STOP" and "RETURN" directives.
       Throwing an exception as:

           die (Template::Exception->new('stop'));

       has the same effect as the directive:

           [% STOP %]

Virtual Methods

       The Template Toolkit implements a number of "virtual methods" which can be applied to scalars, hashes or
       lists.  For example:

           [% mylist = [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ] %]
           [% newlist = mylist.sort %]

       Here "mylist" is a regular reference to a list, and 'sort' is a virtual method that returns a new list of
       the items in sorted order.  You can chain multiple virtual methods together.  For example:

           [% mylist.sort.join(', ') %]

       Here the "join" virtual method is called to join the sorted list into a single string, generating the
       following output:

           bar, baz, foo

       See Template::Manual::VMethods for details of all the virtual methods available.

Variable Interpolation

       The Template Toolkit uses "$" consistently to indicate that a variable should be interpolated in
       position.  Most frequently, you see this in double-quoted strings:

           [% fullname = "$honorific $firstname $surname" %]

       Or embedded in plain text when the "INTERPOLATE" option is set:

           Dear $honorific $firstname $surname,

       The same rules apply within directives.  If a variable is prefixed with a "$" then it is replaced with
       its value before being used.  The most common use is to retrieve an element from a hash where the key is
       stored in a variable.

           [% uid = 'abw' %]
           [% users.$uid %]         # same as 'userlist.abw'

       Curly braces can be used to delimit interpolated variable names where necessary.

           [% users.${me.id}.name %]

       Directives such as "INCLUDE", "PROCESS", etc., that accept a template name as the first argument, will
       automatically quote it for convenience.

           [% INCLUDE foo/bar.txt %]

       The above example is equivalent to:

           [% INCLUDE "foo/bar.txt" %]

       To "INCLUDE" a template whose name is stored in a variable, simply prefix the variable name with "$" to
       have it interpolated.

           [% myfile = 'header' %]
           [% INCLUDE $myfile %]

       This is equivalent to:

           [% INCLUDE header %]

       Note also that a variable containing a reference to a Template::Document object can also be processed in
       this way.

           my $vars = {
               header => Template::Document->new({ ... }),
           };

       Example template:

           [% INCLUDE $header %]

Local and Global Variables

       Any simple variables that you create, or any changes you make to existing variables, will only persist
       while the template is being processed.  The top-level variable hash is copied before processing begins
       and any changes to variables are made in this copy, leaving the original intact.

       The same thing happens when you "INCLUDE" another template. The current namespace hash is cloned to
       prevent any variable changes made in the included template from interfering with existing variables. The
       "PROCESS" option bypasses the localisation step altogether making it slightly faster, but requiring
       greater attention to the possibility of side effects caused by creating or changing any variables within
       the processed template.

           [% BLOCK change_name %]
              [% name = 'bar' %]
           [% END %]

           [% name = 'foo' %]
           [% INCLUDE change_name %]
           [% name %]              # foo
           [% PROCESS change_name %]
           [% name %]              # bar

       Dotted compound variables behave slightly differently because the localisation process is only skin deep.
       The current variable namespace hash is copied, but no attempt is made to perform a deep-copy of other
       structures within it (hashes, arrays, objects, etc).  A variable referencing a hash, for example, will be
       copied to create a new reference but which points to the same hash.  Thus, the general rule is that
       simple variables (undotted variables) are localised, but existing complex structures (dotted variables)
       are not.

           [% BLOCK all_change %]
              [% x = 20 %]         # changes copy
              [% y.z = 'zulu' %]       # changes original
           [% END %]

           [% x = 10
              y = { z => 'zebra' }
           %]
           [% INCLUDE all_change %]
           [% x %]             # still '10'
           [% y.z %]               # now 'zulu'

       If you create a complex structure such as a hash or list reference within a local template context then
       it will cease to exist when the template is finished processing.

           [% BLOCK new_stuff %]
              [% # define a new 'y' hash array in local context
                 y = { z => 'zulu' }
              %]
           [% END %]

           [% x = 10 %]
           [% INCLUDE new_stuff %]
           [% x %]             # outputs '10'
           [% y %]             # nothing, y is undefined

       Similarly, if you update an element of a compound variable which doesn't already exists then a hash will
       be created automatically and deleted again at the end of the block.

           [% BLOCK new_stuff %]
              [% y.z = 'zulu' %]
           [% END %]

       However, if the hash does already exist then you will modify the original with permanent effect.  To
       avoid potential confusion, it is recommended that you don't update elements of complex variables from
       within blocks or templates included by another.

       If you want to create or update truly global variables then you can use the 'global' namespace.  This is
       a hash array automatically created in the top-level namespace which all templates, localised or otherwise
       see the same reference to.  Changes made to variables within this hash are visible across all templates.

           [% global.version = 123 %]

Compile Time Constant Folding

       In addition to variables that get resolved each time a template is processed, you can also define
       variables that get resolved just once when the template is compiled.  This generally results in templates
       processing faster because there is less work to be done.

       To define compile-time constants, specify a "CONSTANTS" hash as a constructor item as per "VARIABLES".
       The "CONSTANTS" hash can contain any kind of complex, nested, or dynamic data structures, just like
       regular variables.

           my $tt = Template->new({
               CONSTANTS => {
                   version => 3.14,
                   release => 'skyrocket',
                   col     => {
                       back => '#ffffff',
                       fore => '#000000',
                   },
                   myobj => My::Object->new(),
                   mysub => sub { ... },
                   joint => ', ',
               },
           });

       Within a template, you access these variables using the "constants" namespace prefix.

           Version [% constants.version %] ([% constants.release %])
           Background: [% constants.col.back %]

       When the template is compiled, these variable references are replaced with the corresponding value.  No
       further variable lookup is then required when the template is processed.

       You can call subroutines, object methods, and even virtual methods on constant variables.

           [% constants.mysub(10, 20) %]
           [% constants.myobj(30, 40) %]
           [% constants.col.keys.sort.join(', ') %]

       One important proviso is that any arguments you pass to subroutines or methods must also be literal
       values or compile time constants.

       For example, these are both fine:

           # literal argument
           [% constants.col.keys.sort.join(', ') %]

           # constant argument
           [% constants.col.keys.sort.join(constants.joint) %]

       But this next example will raise an error at parse time because "joint" is a runtime variable and cannot
       be determined at compile time.

           # ERROR: runtime variable argument!
           [% constants.col.keys.sort.join(joint) %]

       The "CONSTANTS_NAMESPACE" option can be used to provide a different namespace prefix for constant
       variables.  For example:

           my $tt = Template->new({
               CONSTANTS => {
                   version => 3.14,
                   # ...etc...
               },
               CONSTANTS_NAMESPACE => 'const',
           });

       Constants would then be referenced in templates as:

           [% const.version %]

Special Variables

       A number of special variables are automatically defined by the Template Toolkit.

   template
       The "template" variable contains a reference to the main template being processed, in the form of a
       Template::Document object. This variable is correctly defined within "PRE_PROCESS", "PROCESS" and
       "POST_PROCESS" templates, allowing standard headers, footers, etc., to access metadata items from the
       main template. The "name" and "modtime" metadata items are automatically provided, giving the template
       name and modification time in seconds since the epoch.

       Note that the "template" variable always references the top-level template, even when processing other
       template components via "INCLUDE", "PROCESS", etc.

   component
       The "component" variable is like "template" but always contains a reference to the current, innermost
       template component being processed.  In the main template, the "template" and "component" variable will
       reference the same Template::Document object.  In any other template component called from the main
       template, the "template" variable will remain unchanged, but "component" will contain a new reference to
       the current component.

       This example should demonstrate the difference:

           $template->process('foo')
               || die $template->error(), "\n";

       foo template:

           [% template.name %]         # foo
           [% component.name %]        # foo
           [% PROCESS footer %]

       footer template:

           [% template.name %]         # foo
           [% component.name %]        # footer

       Additionally, the "component" variable has two special fields: "caller" and "callers".  "caller" contains
       the name of the template that called the current template (or undef if the values of "template" and
       "component" are the same).  "callers" contains a reference to a list of all the templates that have been
       called on the road to calling the current component template (like a call stack), with the outer-most
       template first.

       Here's an example:

       outer.tt2 template:

           [% component.name %]        # 'outer.tt2'
           [% component.caller %]      # undef
           [% component.callers %]     # undef
           [% PROCESS 'middle.tt2' %]

       middle.tt2 template:

           [% component.name %]        # 'middle.tt2'
           [% component.caller %]      # 'outer.tt2'
           [% component.callers %]     # [ 'outer.tt2' ]
           [% PROCESS 'inner.tt2' %]

       inner.tt2 template:

           [% component.name %]        # 'inner.tt2'
           [% component.caller %]      # 'middle.tt2'
           [% component.callers %]     # [ 'outer.tt2', 'middle.tt2' ]

   loop
       Within a "FOREACH" loop, the "loop" variable references the Template::Iterator object responsible for
       controlling the loop.

           [% FOREACH item = [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ] -%]
              [% "Items:\n" IF loop.first -%]
              [% loop.count %]/[% loop.size %]: [% item %]
           [% END %]

   error
       Within a "CATCH" block, the "error" variable contains a reference to the Template::Exception object
       thrown from within the "TRY" block.  The "type" and "info" methods can be called or the variable itself
       can be printed for automatic stringification into a message of the form ""$type error - $info"".  See
       Template::Exception for further details.

           [% TRY %]
              ...
           [% CATCH %]
              [% error %]
           [% END %]

   content
       The "WRAPPER" method captures the output from a template block and then includes a named template,
       passing the captured output as the 'content' variable.

           [% WRAPPER box %]
           Be not afeard; the isle is full of noises,
           Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
           [% END %]

           [% BLOCK box %]
           <blockquote class="prose">
             [% content %]
           </blockquote>
           [% END %]

Compound Variables

       Compound 'dotted' variables may contain any number of separate elements.  Each element may evaluate to
       any of the permitted variable types and the processor will then correctly use this value to evaluate the
       rest of the variable.  Arguments may be passed to any of the intermediate elements.

           [% myorg.people.sort('surname').first.fullname %]

       Intermediate variables may be used and will behave entirely as expected.

           [% sorted = myorg.people.sort('surname') %]
           [% sorted.first.fullname %]

       This simplified dotted notation has the benefit of hiding the implementation details of your data.  For
       example, you could implement a data structure as a hash array one day and then change it to an object the
       next without requiring any change to the templates.