A Liquid template parser for Elixir.
Liquid template renderer for Elixir with 100% compatibility with the Liquid gem by Shopify. If you find that this library is not byte for byte equivalent to liquid, please open an issue.
The package is available in Hex and can be installed
by adding liquex
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:liquex, "~> 0.13.0"}
]
end
Documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/liquex.
iex> {:ok, template_ast} = Liquex.parse("Hello {{ name }}!")
iex> {content, _context} = Liquex.render!(template_ast, %{"name" => "World"})
iex> content |> to_string()
"Hello World!"
Liquex is byte for byte, 100% compatible with the latest Liquid gem.
Liquex allows resolver functions for variables that may require some extra work to generate. For example, Shopify has variables for things like available products. Pulling all products every time would be too expensive to do on every render. Instead, it would be better to lazily pull that information as needed.
Instead of adding the product list to the context variable map, you can add a function to the variable map. If a function is accessed in the variable map, it is executed.
products_resolver = fn _parent -> Product.all() end
with {:ok, document} <- Liquex.parse("There are {{ products.size }} products"),
{result, _} <- Liquex.render!(document, %{products: products_resolver}) do
result
end
"There are 5 products"
By default, Liquex accesses your maps and structs that may have atom or string (or other type) keys. Liquex will try a string key first. If that fails, it will fall back to using an atom keys. This is similar to how Ruby on Rails handles many of its hashes.
This allows you to pass in your structs without having to replace all your keys with string keys.
iex> {:ok, template_ast} = Liquex.parse("Hello {{ name }}!")
iex> {content, _context} = Liquex.render!(template_ast, %{name: "World"})
iex> content |> to_string()
"Hello World!"
Liquex has a built in cache used specifically for the render tag currently. When loading a partial/sub-template using the render tag, it will try pulling from the cache associated with the context.
By default, caching is disabled, but you may use the built in ETS based cache by configuring it in your context.
:ok = Liquex.Cache.SimpleCache.init()
context = Context.new(%{...}, cache: Liquex.Cache.SimpleCache)
The simple cache is by definition quite simple. To use a more complete caching
system, such as Cachex, you can create a
module that implements the Liquex.Cache
behaviour.
The cache system is very early on. It is expected that it will also be used to memoize some of the variables within your context.
Liquex contains the full suite of standard Liquid filters, but you may find that there are still filters that you may want to add.
Liquex supports adding your own custom filters to the render pipeline. When creating the context for the renderer, set the filter module to your own module.
defmodule CustomFilter do
# Import all the standard liquid filters
use Liquex.Filter
def scream(value, _), do: String.upcase(value) <> "!"
end
context = Liquex.Context.new(%{}, filter_module: CustomFilter)
{:ok, template_ast} = Liquex.parse("{{'Hello World' | scream}}"
{result, _} = Liquex.render!(template_ast, context)
result |> to_string()
iex> "HELLO WORLD!"
One of the strong points for Liquex is that the tag parser can be extended to support non-standard tags. For example, Liquid used internally for the Shopify site includes a large range of tags that are not supported by the base Ruby gem. These tags could also be added to Liquex by extending the liquid parser.
defmodule CustomTag do
@moduledoc false
@behaviour Liquex.Tag
import NimbleParsec
@impl true
# Parse <<Custom Tag>>
def parse() do
text =
lookahead_not(string(">>"))
|> utf8_char([])
|> times(min: 1)
|> reduce({Kernel, :to_string, []})
|> tag(:text)
ignore(string("<<"))
|> optional(text)
|> ignore(string(">>"))
end
@impl true
def render(contents, context) do
{result, context} = Liquex.render!(contents, context)
{["Custom Tag: ", result], context}
end
end
defmodule CustomParser do
use Liquex.Parser, tags: [CustomTag]
end
iex> document = Liquex.parse!("<<Hello World!>>", CustomParser)
iex> {result, _} = Liquex.render!(document, context)
iex> result |> to_string()
"Custom Tag: Hello World!"
For performance reasons, whitespace is kept within empty blocks such as
for/if/unless. The liquid gem checks for "blank" renders and throws them away.
Instead, we continue to use IO lists to combine the output and don't check for
blank results to avoid too many conversions to strings. Since Liquid is mostly
used for whitespace agnostic documents, this seemed like a decent tradeoff. If
you need better whitespace control, use {%-
, {{-
, -%}
, and -}}
.