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Scriban is a fast, powerful, safe and lightweight scripting language and engine for .NET, which was primarily developed for text templating with a compatibility mode for parsing liquid templates.

Today, not only Scriban can be used in text templating scenarios, but also can be integrated as a general scripting engine: For example, Scriban is at the core of the scripting engine for kalk, a command line calculator application for developers.

// Parse a scriban template
var template = Template.Parse("Hello {{name}}!");
var result = template.Render(new { Name = "World" }); // => "Hello World!" 

Parse a Liquid template using the Liquid language:

// Parse a liquid template
var template = Template.ParseLiquid("Hello {{name}}!");
var result = template.Render(new { Name = "World" }); // => "Hello World!" 

The language is very versatile, easy to read and use, similar to liquid templates:

var template = Template.Parse(@"
<ul id='products'>
  {{ for product in products }}
    <li>
      <h2>{{ product.name }}</h2>
           Price: {{ product.price }}
           {{ product.description | string.truncate 15 }}
    </li>
  {{ end }}
</ul>
");
var result = template.Render(new { Products = this.ProductList });

Scriban can also be used in pure scripting context without templating ({{ and }}) and can help you to create your own small DSL.

NOTICE

By default, Properties and methods of .NET objects are automatically exposed with lowercase and _ names. It means that a property like MyMethodIsNice will be exposed as my_method_is_nice. This is the default convention, originally to match the behavior of liquid templates. If you want to change this behavior, you need to use a MemberRenamer delegate

New in 3.0+

Features

Syntax Coloring

You can install the Scriban Extension for Visual Studio Code to get syntax coloring for scriban scripts (without HTML) and scriban html files.

Documentation

Binaries

Scriban is available as a NuGet package: NuGet

Compatible with the following .NET Standard 2.0+ (New in 3.0)

For support for older framework (.NET 3.5, 4.0, 4.5, .NET Standard 1.1, 1.3, they are only provided in older Scriban 2.x, which is no longer supported.

Also the Scriban.Signed NuGet package provides signed assemblies.

Source Embedding

Starting with Scriban 3.2.1+, the package comes with source included so that you can internalize your usage of Scriban into your project. This can be useful in an environment where you can't easily consume NuGet references (e.g Roslyn Source Generators).

WARNING: Currently, the Scriban sources are not set as readonly, so you should not modify Scriban sources in that mode as it will modify the sources for other projects using Scriban on your machine. Use this feature at your own risks!

In order to activate this feature you need to:

If you are targeting netstandard2.0 or .NET Framework 4.7.2+, in order to compile Scriban you will need these NuGet package references (that can come from a dependency that you already have):

<ItemGroup>
    <PackageReference Include="Microsoft.CSharp" Version="4.5.0" />
    <PackageReference Include="System.Threading.Tasks.Extensions" Version="4.5.0" />
</ItemGroup>

NOTE: In this mode, all Scriban types are marked as internal.

You should see a Scriban folder and empty subfolders in your project. This is an issue with Visual Studio 2019 16.8.x (and before) and it will be fixed in VS 2019 16.9+

License

This software is released under the BSD-Clause 2 license.

Related projects

Online Demo

Sponsors

Supports this project with a monthly donation and help me continue improving it. [Become a sponsor]

<img src="https://github.com/lilith.png?size=200" width="64px;" style="border-radius: 50%" alt="lilith"/> Lilith River, author of Imageflow Server, an easy on-demand image editing, optimization, and delivery server

Credits

Adapted logo Puzzle by Andrew Doane from the Noun Project

Author

Alexandre Mutel aka xoofx.