mstch is a complete implementation of {{mustache}} templates using modern C++
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mstch - {{mustache}} templates in C++11

mstch logo

mstch is a complete implementation of {{mustache}} templates using modern C++. It's compliant with specifications v1.1.3, including the lambda module.

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Supported features

mstch supports the complete feature set described in the mustache(5) manpage:

  • JSON-like data structure using Boost.Variant
  • variables, sections, inverted sections
  • partials
  • changing the delimiter
  • C++11 lambdas
  • C++ objects as view models

Basic usage

#include <iostream>
#include <mstch/mstch.hpp>

int main() {
  std::string view{"{{#names}}Hi {{name}}!\n{{/names}}"};
  mstch::map context{
    {"names", mstch::array{
      mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Chris"}}},
      mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Mark"}}},
      mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Scott"}}},
    }}
  };
  
  std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl;
  
  return 0;
}

The output of this example will be:

Hi Chris!
Hi Mark!
Hi Scott!

Data structure

The types in the example above, mstch::array and mstch::map are actually aliases for standard types:

using map = std::map<const std::string, node>;
using array = std::vector<node>;

mstch::node is a boost::variant that can hold a std::string, int, double, bool, mstch::lambda or a std::shared_ptr<mstch::object> (see below), also a map or an array recursively. Essentially it works just like a JSON object.

Note that when using a std::string as value you must explicitly specify the type, since a const char* literal like "foobar" would be implicitly converted to bool. Alternatively you can use C++14 string_literals if your compiler supports it.

Advanced usage

Partials

Partials can be passed in a std::map as the third parameter of the mstch::render function:

std::string view{"{{#names}}{{> user}}{{/names}}"};
std::string user_view{"<strong>{{name}}\n</strong>"};
mstch::map context{
  {"names", mstch::array{
    mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Chris"}}},
    mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Mark"}}},
    mstch::map{{"name", std::string{"Scott"}}},
  }}
};
  
std::cout << mstch::render(view, context, {{"user", user_view}}) << std::endl;

Output:

<strong>Chris</strong>
<strong>Mark</strong>
<strong>Scott</strong>

Lambdas

C++11 lambda expressions can be used to add logic to your templates. Like a const char* literal, lambdas can be implicitly converted to bool, so they must be wrapped in a mstch::lambda object when used in a mstch::node. The lambda expression passed to mstch::lambda must itself return a mstch::node. The returned node will be rendered to a string, then it will be parsed as a template.

The lambda expression accepts either no parameters:

std::string view{"Hello {{lambda}}!"};
mstch::map context{
  {"lambda", mstch::lambda{[]() -> mstch::node {
    return std::string{"World"};
  }}}
};

std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl;

Output:

Hello World!

Or it accepts a const std::string& that gets the unrendered literal block:

std::string view{"{{#bold}}{{yay}} :){{/bold}}"};
mstch::map context{
  {"yay", std::string{"Yay!"}},
  {"bold", mstch::lambda{[](const std::string& text) -> mstch::node {
    return "<b>" + text + "</b>";
  }}}
};

std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl;

Output:

<b>Yay! :)</b>

Objects

Custom objects can also be used as context for rendering templates. The class must inherit from mstch::object, and register it's exported methods with register_methods. Exported methods must have the return type of mstch::node. Objects must be created as a std::shared_ptr.

class example: public mstch::object {
 public:
  example(): m_value(1) {
    register_methods(this, {
      {"count", &example::count},
      {"names", &example::names}  
    });
  }
  
  mstch::node count() {
    return m_value++;
  }
  
  mstch::node names() {
    return mstch::array{
      std::string{"Chris"}, std::string{"Mark"}, std::string{"Scott"}};
  }
  
 private:
  int m_value;
};

std::string view{"{{#names}}<b>{{count}}</b>: {{.}}\n{{/names}}"};
const auto context = std::make_shared<example>();

std::cout << mstch::render(view, context) << std::endl;

Output:

<b>1</b>: Chris
<b>2</b>: Mark
<b>3</b>: Scott

Requirements

  • A C++ compiler with decent C++11 support. Currently tested with:
    • GCC 4.7, 4.8, 4.9, 5.1
    • clang 3.5, 3.6, 3.7 (both libstdc++ and libc++ are supported)
    • MSVC 2013, 2015
  • Boost 1.54+ for Boost.Variant
  • CMake 3.0+ for building

Using mstch in your project

If you are using CMake, the easiest way to include mstch in your project is to copy the whole directory to your source tree, and use add_subdirectory in your CMakeLists.txt. This will set a variable named mstch_INCLUDE_DIR that contains its include path, and add a static library target named mstch. For example:

add_subdirectory(external/mstch)
include_directories(${mstch_INCLUDE_DIR})
target_link_libraries(your_project mstch)

If you prefer to install the library globally, you can simply do the following from the root of the source tree:

 $ mkdir build
 $ cd build
 $ cmake ..
 $ make
 $ make install

The install command may require root privileges. This will also install CMake config files, so you can use use find_package in your CMakeLists.txt:

find_package(mstch)
target_link_libraries(your_project mstch::mstch)

Running the unit tests

Unit tests are using the Catch framework and rapidjson to parse the Mustache specifications, all of which are included in the repository as git submodules. Various Boost libraries are also required to build them.

Don't forget to initialize submodules:

 $ git submodule init
 $ git submodule update

To build and run the unit tests:

 $ mkdir build
 $ cd build
 $ cmake -DWITH_UNIT_TESTS=ON ..
 $ make
 $ make test

License

mstch is licensed under the MIT license.