Project templating tool.
Themplate is a tool to generate projects from templates. The templating language is described at https://github.com/bennofs/themplate.
Themplate
This is a very simple program for creating project templates.
Installing Themplate
From hackage:
$ cabal install themplate
From repository:
Checkout the source code:
$ git clone https://github.com/bennofs/themplate
$ cd themplate
Build in a cabal sandbox and install:
$ cabal sandbox init
$ cabal install --prefix=~/.cabal # Install themplate executable to ~/.cabal/bin/themplate
Using Themplate
To use a exisiting template with themplate, just run:
$ themplate init <project name> <template name>
This will initialize the template with the given name in a new directory with the name of the project. To list all available templates, run:
$ themplate list
Configuration file
The configuration file is read using configurator, the syntax is described here. The options are passed to the template, so they can use patterns to include user-specific information. An example configuration file could look like this:
user {
name = "Benno Fünfstück"
email = "[email protected]"
}
github {
user = "bennofs"
}
This will make the options user.name
, user.email
and github.user
available to templates.
Creating templates
A template is just a subdirectory in ~/.themplate
. When a new project is created with the template, the files in that directory are copied to the project directory. The files contents and the file names in the template can contain patterns. Patterns are enclosed in {{
and }}
. In a pattern, the following special forms are substituted:
$$name$$
will be substituted for the value of the configuration optionname
. An error is thrown if the configuration option doesn't exist.??name??
will be substituted for the value of the configuration optionname
. If the configuration option doesn't exist, the pattern will evaluate to the empty string.
There is one special configuration option, project.name
. This will always be set to the current project's name. ??name??
patterns are checked prior to $$name$$
patterns, so the following:
{{homepage: http://github.com/??github.user??/$$project.name$$/}}
won't throw an error if github.user
is unset, even if project.name
was unset.
You can find an example template at https://github.com/bennofs/dotfiles/tree/master/.themplate/.