require 'hamlit/parser/haml_error' require 'hamlit/parser/haml_buffer' require 'hamlit/parser/haml_options' require 'hamlit/parser/haml_compiler' require 'hamlit/parser/haml_parser' module Hamlit # This module contains various helpful methods to make it easier to do various tasks. # {Haml::Helpers} is automatically included in the context # that a Haml template is parsed in, so all these methods are at your # disposal from within the template. module HamlHelpers # An object that raises an error when \{#to\_s} is called. # It's used to raise an error when the return value of a helper is used # when it shouldn't be. class ErrorReturn def initialize(method) @message = < e e.backtrace.shift # If the ErrorReturn is used directly in the template, # we don't want Haml's stuff to get into the backtrace, # so we get rid of the format_script line. # # We also have to subtract one from the Haml line number # since the value is passed to format_script the line after # it's actually used. if e.backtrace.first =~ /^\(eval\):\d+:in `format_script/ e.backtrace.shift e.backtrace.first.gsub!(/^\(haml\):(\d+)/) {|s| "(haml):#{$1.to_i - 1}"} end raise e end # @return [String] A human-readable string representation def inspect "::Hamlit::HamlHelpers::ErrorReturn(#{@message.inspect})" end end self.extend self @@action_view_defined = false # @return [Boolean] Whether or not ActionView is loaded def self.action_view? @@action_view_defined end # Note: this does **not** need to be called when using Haml helpers # normally in Rails. # # Initializes the current object as though it were in the same context # as a normal ActionView instance using Haml. # This is useful if you want to use the helpers in a context # other than the normal setup with ActionView. # For example: # # context = Object.new # class << context # include Haml::Helpers # end # context.init_haml_helpers # context.haml_tag :p, "Stuff" # def init_haml_helpers @haml_buffer = ::Hamlit::HamlBuffer.new(haml_buffer, ::Hamlit::HamlOptions.new.for_buffer) nil end # Runs a block of code in a non-Haml context # (i.e. \{#is\_haml?} will return false). # # This is mainly useful for rendering sub-templates such as partials in a non-Haml language, # particularly where helpers may behave differently when run from Haml. # # Note that this is automatically applied to Rails partials. # # @yield A block which won't register as Haml def non_haml was_active = @haml_buffer.active? @haml_buffer.active = false yield ensure @haml_buffer.active = was_active end # Uses \{#preserve} to convert any newlines inside whitespace-sensitive tags # into the HTML entities for endlines. # # @param tags [Array] Tags that should have newlines escaped # # @overload find_and_preserve(input, tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve]) # Escapes newlines within a string. # # @param input [String] The string within which to escape newlines # @overload find_and_preserve(tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve]) # Escapes newlines within a block of Haml code. # # @yield The block within which to escape newlines def find_and_preserve(input = nil, tags = haml_buffer.options[:preserve], &block) return find_and_preserve(capture_haml(&block), input || tags) if block tags = tags.each_with_object('') do |t, s| s << '|' unless s.empty? s << Regexp.escape(t) end re = /<(#{tags})([^>]*)>(.*?)(<\/\1>)/im input.to_s.gsub(re) do |s| s =~ re # Can't rely on $1, etc. existing since Rails' SafeBuffer#gsub is incompatible "<#{$1}#{$2}>#{preserve($3)}" end end # Takes any string, finds all the newlines, and converts them to # HTML entities so they'll render correctly in # whitespace-sensitive tags without screwing up the indentation. # # @overload preserve(input) # Escapes newlines within a string. # # @param input [String] The string within which to escape all newlines # @overload preserve # Escapes newlines within a block of Haml code. # # @yield The block within which to escape newlines def preserve(input = nil, &block) return preserve(capture_haml(&block)) if block s = input.to_s.chomp("\n") s.gsub!(/\n/, ' ') s.delete!("\r") s end alias_method :flatten, :preserve # Takes an `Enumerable` object and a block # and iterates over the enum, # yielding each element to a Haml block # and putting the result into `
  • ` elements. # This creates a list of the results of the block. # For example: # # = list_of([['hello'], ['yall']]) do |i| # = i[0] # # Produces: # #
  • hello
  • #
  • yall
  • # # And: # # = list_of({:title => 'All the stuff', :description => 'A book about all the stuff.'}) do |key, val| # %h3= key.humanize # %p= val # # Produces: # #
  • #

    Title

    #

    All the stuff

    #
  • #
  • #

    Description

    #

    A book about all the stuff.

    #
  • # # While: # # = list_of(["Home", "About", "Contact", "FAQ"], {class: "nav", role: "nav"}) do |item| # %a{ href="#" }= item # # Produces: # # # # # # # `[[class", "nav"], [role", "nav"]]` could have been used instead of `{class: "nav", role: "nav"}` (or any enumerable collection where each pair of items responds to #to_s) # # @param enum [Enumerable] The list of objects to iterate over # @param [Enumerable<#to_s,#to_s>] opts Each key/value pair will become an attribute pair for each list item element. # @yield [item] A block which contains Haml code that goes within list items # @yieldparam item An element of `enum` def list_of(enum, opts={}, &block) opts_attributes = opts.each_with_object('') {|(k, v), s| s << " #{k}='#{v}'"} enum.each_with_object('') do |i, ret| result = capture_haml(i, &block) if result.count("\n") > 1 result.gsub!("\n", "\n ") result = "\n #{result.strip!}\n" else result.strip! end ret << "\n" unless ret.empty? ret << %Q!#{result}! end end # Returns a hash containing default assignments for the `xmlns`, `lang`, and `xml:lang` # attributes of the `html` HTML element. # For example, # # %html{html_attrs} # # becomes # # # # @param lang [String] The value of `xml:lang` and `lang` # @return [{#to_s => String}] The attribute hash def html_attrs(lang = 'en-US') if haml_buffer.options[:format] == :xhtml {:xmlns => "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", 'xml:lang' => lang, :lang => lang} else {:lang => lang} end end # Increments the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds # to the lines of the template. # For example: # # %h1 foo # - tab_up # %p bar # - tab_down # %strong baz # # Produces: # #

    foo

    #

    bar

    # baz # # @param i [Fixnum] The number of tabs by which to increase the indentation # @see #tab_down def tab_up(i = 1) haml_buffer.tabulation += i end # Decrements the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds # to the lines of the template. # # @param i [Fixnum] The number of tabs by which to decrease the indentation # @see #tab_up def tab_down(i = 1) haml_buffer.tabulation -= i end # Sets the number of tabs the buffer automatically adds # to the lines of the template, # but only for the duration of the block. # For example: # # %h1 foo # - with_tabs(2) do # %p bar # %strong baz # # Produces: # #

    foo

    #

    bar

    # baz # # # @param i [Fixnum] The number of tabs to use # @yield A block in which the indentation will be `i` spaces def with_tabs(i) old_tabs = haml_buffer.tabulation haml_buffer.tabulation = i yield ensure haml_buffer.tabulation = old_tabs end # Surrounds a block of Haml code with strings, # with no whitespace in between. # For example: # # = surround '(', ')' do # %a{:href => "food"} chicken # # Produces: # # (chicken) # # and # # = surround '*' do # %strong angry # # Produces: # # *angry* # # @param front [String] The string to add before the Haml # @param back [String] The string to add after the Haml # @yield A block of Haml to surround def surround(front, back = front, &block) output = capture_haml(&block) "#{front}#{output.chomp}#{back}\n" end # Prepends a string to the beginning of a Haml block, # with no whitespace between. # For example: # # = precede '*' do # %span.small Not really # # Produces: # # *Not really # # @param str [String] The string to add before the Haml # @yield A block of Haml to prepend to def precede(str, &block) "#{str}#{capture_haml(&block).chomp}\n" end # Appends a string to the end of a Haml block, # with no whitespace between. # For example: # # click # = succeed '.' do # %a{:href=>"thing"} here # # Produces: # # click # here. # # @param str [String] The string to add after the Haml # @yield A block of Haml to append to def succeed(str, &block) "#{capture_haml(&block).chomp}#{str}\n" end # Captures the result of a block of Haml code, # gets rid of the excess indentation, # and returns it as a string. # For example, after the following, # # .foo # - foo = capture_haml(13) do |a| # %p= a # # the local variable `foo` would be assigned to `"

    13

    \n"`. # # @param args [Array] Arguments to pass into the block # @yield [args] A block of Haml code that will be converted to a string # @yieldparam args [Array] `args` def capture_haml(*args, &block) buffer = eval('if defined? _hamlout then _hamlout else nil end', block.binding) || haml_buffer with_haml_buffer(buffer) do position = haml_buffer.buffer.length haml_buffer.capture_position = position value = block.call(*args) captured = haml_buffer.buffer.slice!(position..-1) if captured == '' and value != haml_buffer.buffer captured = (value.is_a?(String) ? value : nil) end return nil if captured.nil? return (haml_buffer.options[:ugly] ? captured : prettify(captured)) end ensure haml_buffer.capture_position = nil end # Outputs text directly to the Haml buffer, with the proper indentation. # # @param text [#to_s] The text to output def haml_concat(text = "") haml_internal_concat text ErrorReturn.new("haml_concat") end # Internal method to write directly to the buffer with control of # whether the first line should be indented, and if there should be a # final newline. # # Lines added will have the proper indentation. This can be controlled # for the first line. # # Used by #haml_concat and #haml_tag. # # @param text [#to_s] The text to output # @param newline [Boolean] Whether to add a newline after the text # @param indent [Boolean] Whether to add indentation to the first line def haml_internal_concat(text = "", newline = true, indent = true) if haml_buffer.options[:ugly] || haml_buffer.tabulation == 0 haml_buffer.buffer << "#{text}#{"\n" if newline}" else haml_buffer.buffer << %[#{haml_indent if indent}#{text.to_s.gsub("\n", "\n#{haml_indent}")}#{"\n" if newline}] end end private :haml_internal_concat # Allows writing raw content. `haml_internal_concat_raw` isn't # effected by XSS mods. Used by #haml_tag to write the actual tags. alias :haml_internal_concat_raw :haml_internal_concat # @return [String] The indentation string for the current line def haml_indent ' ' * haml_buffer.tabulation end # Creates an HTML tag with the given name and optionally text and attributes. # Can take a block that will run between the opening and closing tags. # If the block is a Haml block or outputs text using \{#haml\_concat}, # the text will be properly indented. # # `name` can be a string using the standard Haml class/id shorthand # (e.g. "span#foo.bar", "#foo"). # Just like standard Haml tags, these class and id values # will be merged with manually-specified attributes. # # `flags` is a list of symbol flags # like those that can be put at the end of a Haml tag # (`:/`, `:<`, and `:>`). # Currently, only `:/` and `:<` are supported. # # `haml_tag` outputs directly to the buffer; # its return value should not be used. # If you need to get the results as a string, # use \{#capture\_haml\}. # # For example, # # haml_tag :table do # haml_tag :tr do # haml_tag 'td.cell' do # haml_tag :strong, "strong!" # haml_concat "data" # end # haml_tag :td do # haml_concat "more_data" # end # end # end # # outputs # # # # # # #
    # # strong! # # data # # more_data #
    # # @param name [#to_s] The name of the tag # # @overload haml_tag(name, *rest, attributes = {}) # @yield The block of Haml code within the tag # @overload haml_tag(name, text, *flags, attributes = {}) # @param text [#to_s] The text within the tag # @param flags [Array] Haml end-of-tag flags def haml_tag(name, *rest, &block) ret = ErrorReturn.new("haml_tag") text = rest.shift.to_s unless [Symbol, Hash, NilClass].any? {|t| rest.first.is_a? t} flags = [] flags << rest.shift while rest.first.is_a? Symbol attrs = (rest.shift || {}) attrs.keys.each {|key| attrs[key.to_s] = attrs.delete(key)} unless attrs.empty? name, attrs = merge_name_and_attributes(name.to_s, attrs) attributes = ::Hamlit::HamlCompiler.build_attributes(haml_buffer.html?, haml_buffer.options[:attr_wrapper], haml_buffer.options[:escape_attrs], haml_buffer.options[:hyphenate_data_attrs], attrs) if text.nil? && block.nil? && (haml_buffer.options[:autoclose].include?(name) || flags.include?(:/)) haml_internal_concat_raw "<#{name}#{attributes}#{' /' if haml_buffer.options[:format] == :xhtml}>" return ret end if flags.include?(:/) raise ::Hamlit::HamlError.new(::Hamlit::HamlError.message(:self_closing_content)) if text raise ::Hamlit::HamlError.new(::Hamlit::HamlError.message(:illegal_nesting_self_closing)) if block end tag = "<#{name}#{attributes}>" end_tag = "" if block.nil? text = text.to_s if text.include?("\n") haml_internal_concat_raw tag tab_up haml_internal_concat text tab_down haml_internal_concat_raw end_tag else haml_internal_concat_raw tag, false haml_internal_concat text, false, false haml_internal_concat_raw end_tag, true, false end return ret end if text raise ::Hamlit::HamlError.new(::Hamlit::HamlError.message(:illegal_nesting_line, name)) end if flags.include?(:<) haml_internal_concat_raw tag, false haml_internal_concat "#{capture_haml(&block).strip}", false, false haml_internal_concat_raw end_tag, true, false return ret end haml_internal_concat_raw tag tab_up block.call tab_down haml_internal_concat_raw end_tag ret end # Conditionally wrap a block in an element. If `condition` is `true` then # this method renders the tag described by the arguments in `tag` (using # \{#haml_tag}) with the given block inside, otherwise it just renders the block. # # For example, # # - haml_tag_if important, '.important' do # %p # A (possibly) important paragraph. # # will produce # #
    #

    # A (possibly) important paragraph. #

    #
    # # if `important` is truthy, and just # #

    # A (possibly) important paragraph. #

    # # otherwise. # # Like \{#haml_tag}, `haml_tag_if` outputs directly to the buffer and its # return value should not be used. Use \{#capture_haml} if you need to use # its results as a string. # # @param condition The condition to test to determine whether to render # the enclosing tag # @param tag Definition of the enclosing tag. See \{#haml_tag} for details # (specifically the form that takes a block) def haml_tag_if(condition, *tag) if condition haml_tag(*tag){ yield } else yield end ErrorReturn.new("haml_tag_if") end # Characters that need to be escaped to HTML entities from user input HTML_ESCAPE = { '&' => '&', '<' => '<', '>' => '>', '"' => '"', "'" => ''' } HTML_ESCAPE_REGEX = /[\"><&]/ # Returns a copy of `text` with ampersands, angle brackets and quotes # escaped into HTML entities. # # Note that if ActionView is loaded and XSS protection is enabled # (as is the default for Rails 3.0+, and optional for version 2.3.5+), # this won't escape text declared as "safe". # # @param text [String] The string to sanitize # @return [String] The sanitized string def html_escape(text) text = text.to_s text.gsub(HTML_ESCAPE_REGEX, HTML_ESCAPE) end HTML_ESCAPE_ONCE_REGEX = /[\"><]|&(?!(?:[a-zA-Z]+|#(?:\d+|[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+));)/ # Escapes HTML entities in `text`, but without escaping an ampersand # that is already part of an escaped entity. # # @param text [String] The string to sanitize # @return [String] The sanitized string def escape_once(text) text = text.to_s text.gsub(HTML_ESCAPE_ONCE_REGEX, HTML_ESCAPE) end # Returns whether or not the current template is a Haml template. # # This function, unlike other {Haml::Helpers} functions, # also works in other `ActionView` templates, # where it will always return false. # # @return [Boolean] Whether or not the current template is a Haml template def is_haml? !@haml_buffer.nil? && @haml_buffer.active? end # Returns whether or not `block` is defined directly in a Haml template. # # @param block [Proc] A Ruby block # @return [Boolean] Whether or not `block` is defined directly in a Haml template def block_is_haml?(block) eval('!!defined?(_hamlout)', block.binding) end private # Parses the tag name used for \{#haml\_tag} # and merges it with the Ruby attributes hash. def merge_name_and_attributes(name, attributes_hash = {}) # skip merging if no ids or classes found in name return name, attributes_hash unless name =~ /^(.+?)?([\.#].*)$/ return $1 || "div", ::Hamlit::HamlBuffer.merge_attrs( ::Hamlit::HamlParser.parse_class_and_id($2), attributes_hash) end # Runs a block of code with the given buffer as the currently active buffer. # # @param buffer [Haml::Buffer] The Haml buffer to use temporarily # @yield A block in which the given buffer should be used def with_haml_buffer(buffer) @haml_buffer, old_buffer = buffer, @haml_buffer old_buffer.active, old_was_active = false, old_buffer.active? if old_buffer @haml_buffer.active, was_active = true, @haml_buffer.active? yield ensure @haml_buffer.active = was_active old_buffer.active = old_was_active if old_buffer @haml_buffer = old_buffer end # The current {Haml::Buffer} object. # # @return [Haml::Buffer] def haml_buffer @haml_buffer if defined? @haml_buffer end # Gives a proc the same local `_hamlout` and `_erbout` variables # that the current template has. # # @param proc [#call] The proc to bind # @return [Proc] A new proc with the new variables bound def haml_bind_proc(&proc) _hamlout = haml_buffer #double assignment is to avoid warnings _erbout = _erbout = _hamlout.buffer proc { |*args| proc.call(*args) } end def prettify(text) text = text.split(/^/) text.delete('') min_tabs = nil text.each do |line| tabs = line.index(/[^ ]/) || line.length min_tabs ||= tabs min_tabs = min_tabs > tabs ? tabs : min_tabs end text.each_with_object('') do |line, str| str << line.slice(min_tabs, line.length) end end end end # @private class Object # Haml overrides various `ActionView` helpers, # which call an \{#is\_haml?} method # to determine whether or not the current context object # is a proper Haml context. # Because `ActionView` helpers may be included in non-`ActionView::Base` classes, # it's a good idea to define \{#is\_haml?} for all objects. def is_haml? false end end