neutralts

neutral

Web Template Engine - Neutral TS

Neutral TS is a safe, modular, language-agnostic template engine built in Rust. It works as a native Rust library or via IPC for other languages like Python and PHP. With Neutral TS you can reuse the same template across multiple languages with consistent results.

Examples for Rust, Python, PHP, Node.js and Go here: download. All PWA examples use the same template: Neutral templates.

The documentation of the web template engine is here: template engine doc and Rust documentation here: Rust doc.

Template Engine - Features

It allows you to create templates compatible with any system and any programming language.

How it works

Neutral TS supports two integration approaches:

Available Modes:

The MySQL Analogy (IPC architecture):

Uses the exact same client-server mechanism as a database:

MySQL:

Neutral TS:

Why It Works:

Security Advantage:

The IPC architecture provides important security benefits:

Key Advantage:

Just like an SQL query returns the same data from any language, a Neutral TS template returns the same HTML from Python, PHP, Rust… with added security isolation.

Performance Consideration:

The IPC approach introduces performance overhead due to inter-process communication. The impact varies depending on:

For most web applications, the security and interoperability benefits compensate for the performance overhead.

IPC Components:

Localization

Neutral TS template engine provides powerful and easy-to-use translation utilities… define the translation in a JSON:

"locale": {
    "current": "en",
    "trans": {
        "en": {
            "Hello": "Hello",
            "ref:greeting-nts": "Hello"
        },
        "es": {
            "Hello": "Hola",
            "ref:greeting-nts": "Hola"
        },
        "de": {
            "Hello": "Hallo",
            "ref:greeting-nts": "Hallo"
        },
        "fr": {
            "Hello": "Bonjour",
            "ref:greeting-nts": "Bonjour"
        },
        "el": {
            "Hello": "Γεια σας",
            "ref:greeting-nts": "Γεια σας"
        }
    }
}

Now you can use:

{:trans; Hello :}

Actually you can always use “trans” because if there is no translation it returns the text. See: locale and trans.

BIF Structure (Built-in function)


    .-- open bif
    |    .-- bif name
    |    |   .-- name separator
    |    |   |     .-- params
    |    |   |     |    .-- params/code separator
    |    |   |     |    |    .-- code
    |    |   |     |    |    |   .-- close bif
    |    |   |     |    |    |   |
    v    v   v     v    v    v   v
    -- ----- - -------- -- ----- --
    {:snippet; snipname >>  ...  :}
    ------------------------------
            ^ -------------------
            |         ^
            |         |
            |         `-- source
            `-- Built-in function

BIF example: (See: syntax)

{:filled; varname >>
    Hello!
:}

Neutral TS template engine is based on BIFs with block structure, we call the set of nested BIFs of the same level a block:


              .-- {:coalesce;
              |       {:code;
              |           {:code; ... :}
              |           {:code; ... :}
    Block --> |           {:code; ... :}
              |       :}
              |       {:code;
              |           {:code; ... :}
              |       :}
              `-- :}

                  {:coalesce;
              .------ {:code;
              |           {:code; ... :}
    Block --> |           {:code; ... :}
              |           {:code; ... :}
              `------ :}
              .------ {:code;
    Block --> |           {:code; ... :}
              `------ :}
                  :}

Short circuit at block level, if varname is not defined, the following “»” is not evaluated:

{:defined; varname >>
    {:code;
        {:code;
            ...
        :}
    :}
:}

By design all BIFs can be nested and there can be a BIF anywhere in another BIF except in the name.

Data

The data is defined in a JSON:

"data": {
    "true": true,
    "false": false,
    "hello": "hello",
    "zero": "0",
    "one": "1",
    "spaces": "  ",
    "empty": "",
    "null": null,
    "emptyarr": [],
    "array": {
        "true": true,
        "false": false,
        "hello": "hello",
        "zero": "0",
        "one": "1",
        "spaces": "  ",
        "empty": "",
        "null": null
    }
}

And they are displayed with the bif {:; … :} (var)

Simple variable:

{:;hello:}

Arrays with the “->” operator

{:;array->hello:}

Snippets

Snippet is a tool that can be used in a similar way to a function, it defines a snippet:

{:snippet; name >>
    Any content here, including other snippet.
:}

From then on you can invoke it like this:

{:snippet; name :}

See: snippet.

Cache

The cache is modular, allowing only parts of the template to be included in the cache:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
    <head>
        <title>Template engine cache</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        {:cache; /120/ >>
            <div>{:code; ... :}</div>
        :}
        <div>{:date; %H:%M:%S :}</div>
        {:cache; /120/ >>
            <div>{:code; ... :}</div>
        :}
    </body>
</html>

Or exclude parts of the cache, the previous example would be much better like this:

{:cache; /120/ >>
    <!DOCTYPE html>
    <html>
        <head>
            <title>Template engine cache</title>
        </head>
        <body>
            <div>{:code; ... :}</div>
            {:!cache;
                {:date; %H:%M:%S :}
            :}
            <div>{:code; ... :}</div>
        </body>
    </html>
:}

Fetch

Neutral TS template engine provides a basic JavaScript to perform simple fetch requests:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
    <head>
        <title>Template engine</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        {:fetch; "/form-login" >>
            <div>Loading...</div>
        :}
    </body>
</html>

See: fetch.

Object

obj allows you to execute scripts in other languages like Python

{:obj;
    {
        "engine": "Python",
        "file": "script.py",
        "template": "template.ntpl"
    }
:}

See: obj.

Debug

Display debug information

{:debug; data->varname :}

See: debug.

Web template - example

{:*
    comment
*:}
{:locale; locale.json :}
{:include; theme-snippets.ntpl :}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="{:lang;:}">
    <head>
        <title>{:trans; Site title :}</title>
        <meta charset="utf-8">
        <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
        {:snippet; current-theme:head :}
        <link rel="stylesheet" href="bootstrap.min.css">
    </head>
    <body class="{:;body-class:}">
        {:snippet; current-theme:body_begin  :}
        {:snippet; current-theme:body-content :}
        {:snippet; current-theme:body-footer  :}
        <script src="jquery.min.js"></script>
    </body>
</html>

Usage

You need two things, a template file and a json schema:

{
    "config": {
        "comments": "remove",
        "cache_prefix": "neutral-cache",
        "cache_dir": "",
        "cache_on_post": false,
        "cache_on_get": true,
        "cache_on_cookies": true,
        "cache_disable": false,
        "filter_all": false,
        "disable_js": false
    },
    "inherit": {
        "locale": {
            "current": "en",
            "trans": {
                "en": {
                    "Hello nts": "Hello",
                    "ref:greeting-nts": "Hello"
                },
                "es": {
                    "Hello nts": "Hola",
                    "ref:greeting-nts": "Hola"
                },
                "de": {
                    "Hello nts": "Hallo",
                    "ref:greeting-nts": "Hallo"
                },
                "fr": {
                    "Hello nts": "Bonjour",
                    "ref:greeting-nts": "Bonjour"
                },
                "el": {
                    "Hello nts": "Γεια σας",
                    "ref:greeting-nts": "Γεια σας"
                }
            }
        }
    },
    "data": {
        "CONTEXT": {
            "ROUTE": "",
            "HOST": "",
            "GET": {},
            "POST": {},
            "HEADERS": {},
            "FILES": {},
            "COOKIES": {},
            "SESSION": {},
            "ENV": {}
        },
        "site_name": "MySite",
        "site": {
            "name": "MySite",
        }
    }
}

Template file.ntpl:

{:;site_name:}

Or for array:

{:;site->name:}

Native use (Rust)

Alternatively, you can use: Neutral TS Rust IPC Client

use neutralts::Template;
use serde_json::json;

let template = Template::from_file_value("file.ntpl", schema).unwrap();
let content = template.render();

// e.g.: 200
let status_code = template.get_status_code();

// e.g.: OK
let status_text = template.get_status_text();

// empty if no error
let status_param = template.get_status_param();

// act accordingly at this point according to your framework

Rust examples

Python - Package

pip install neutraltemplate
from neutraltemplate import NeutralTemplate

template = NeutralTemplate("file.ntpl", schema)
contents = template.render()

# e.g.: 200
status_code = template.get_status_code()

# e.g.: OK
status_text = template.get_status_text()

# empty if no error
status_param = template.get_status_param()

# act accordingly at this point according to your framework

Python examples

Python - IPC

from NeutralIpcTemplate import NeutralIpcTemplate

template = NeutralIpcTemplate("file.ntpl", schema)
contents = template.render()

# e.g.: 200
status_code = template.get_status_code()

# e.g.: OK
status_text = template.get_status_text()

# empty if no error
status_param = template.get_status_param()

# act accordingly at this point according to your framework

Python examples

PHP

PHP examples

Node.js

Node.js examples

Go

Go examples

Neutral TS template engine