= Erubi Erubi is a ERB template engine for ruby. It is a simplified fork of Erubis, using the same basic algorithm, with the following differences: * Handles postfix conditionals when using escaping (e.g. <%= foo if bar %>) * Supports frozen_string_literal: true in templates via :freeze option * Works with ruby's --enable-frozen-string-literal option * Automatically freezes strings for template text when ruby optimizes it (on ruby 2.1+) * Escapes ' (apostrophe) when escaping for better XSS protection * Has 15x-6x faster escaping by using erb/escape or cgi/escape * Has 81% smaller memory footprint (calculated using +ObjectSpace.memsize_of_all+) * Does no monkey patching (Erubis adds a method to Kernel) * Uses an immutable design (all options passed to the constructor, which returns a frozen object) * Has simpler internals (1 file, <150 lines of code) * Is not dead (Erubis hasn't been updated since 2011) It is not designed with Erubis API compatibility in mind, though most Erubis ERB syntax works, with the following exceptions: * No support for <%=== for debug output = Installation gem install erubi = Source Code Source code is available on GitHub at https://github.com/jeremyevans/erubi = Usage Erubi only has built in support for retrieving the generated source for a file: require 'erubi' eval(Erubi::Engine.new(File.read('filename.erb')).src) Most users will probably use Erubi via Rails or Tilt. Erubi is the default erb template handler in Tilt 2.0.6+ and Rails 5.1+. == Capturing Erubi does not support capturing block output into the template by default. It currently ships with two implementations that allow it. === Erubi::CaptureBlockEngine The recommended implementation can be required via +erubi/capture_block+, which allows capturing to work with normal <%= and <%== tags. <%= form do %> <% end %> When using the capture_block support, capture methods should just return the text it emit into the template, and call +capture+ on the buffer value. Since the buffer variable is a local variable and not an instance variable by default, you'll probably want to set the +:bufvar+ variable when using the capture_block support to an instance variable, and have any methods used call capture on that instance variable. Example: def form(&block) "
" end puts eval(Erubi::CaptureBlockEngine.new(<<-END, bufvar: '@_buf', trim: false).src) before <%= form do %> inside <% end %> after END # Output: # before # # after To use the capture_block support with tilt: require 'tilt' require 'erubi/capture_block' Tilt.new("filename.erb", :engine_class=>Erubi::CaptureBlockEngine).render Note that the capture_block support, while very compatible with the default support, is not 100% compatible. One area where behavior differs is when using multiple statements inside <%= and <%== tags: <%= 1; 2 %> The default support will output 2, but the capture_block support will output 1. === Erubi::CaptureEndEngine An alternative capture implementation can be required via +erubi/capture_end+, which supports it via <%|= and <%|== tags which are closed with a <%| tag: <%|= form do %> <%| end %> It is only recommended to use +erubi/capture_end+ for backwards compatibilty. When using the capture_end support, capture methods (such as +form+ in the example above) should return the (potentially modified) buffer. Similar to the capture_block support, using an instance variable is recommended. Example: def form @_buf << "" @_buf end puts eval(Erubi::CaptureEndEngine.new(<<-END, bufvar: '@_buf').src) before <%|= form do %> inside <%| end %> after END # Output: # before # # after Alternatively, passing the option :yield_returns_buffer => true will return the buffer captured by the block instead of the last expression in the block. = Reporting Bugs The bug tracker is located at https://github.com/jeremyevans/erubi/issues = License MIT = Authors Jeremy Evans
kuwata-lab.com