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A python implementation of the mustache templating language.

Why chevron?

I'm glad you asked!

chevron is fast

Chevron runs in less than half the time of pystache (Which is not even up to date on the spec). And in about 70% the time of Stache (A 'trimmed' version of mustache, also not spec compliant).

chevron is pep8

The flake8 command is run by travis to ensure consistency.

chevron is spec compliant

Chevron passes all the unittests provided by the spec (in every version listed below).

If you find a test that chevron does not pass, please report it.

chevron is Python 2 and 3 compatible

Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, and 3.6 are all tested by travis.

USAGE

Commandline usage: (if installed via pypi)

usage: chevron [-h] [-v] [-d DATA] [-p PARTIALS_PATH] [-e PARTIALS_EXT]
               [-l DEF_LDEL] [-r DEF_RDEL]
               template

positional arguments:
  template              The mustache file

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --version         show program's version number and exit
  -d DATA, --data DATA  The json data file
  -p PARTIALS_PATH, --path PARTIALS_PATH
                        The directory where your partials reside
  -e PARTIALS_EXT, --ext PARTIALS_EXT
                        The extension for your mustache partials, 'mustache'
                        by default
  -l DEF_LDEL, --left-delimiter DEF_LDEL
                        The default left delimiter, "{{" by default.
  -r DEF_RDEL, --right-delimiter DEF_RDEL
                        The default right delimiter, "}}" by default.

Python usage with strings

import chevron

chevron.render('Hello, {{ mustache }}!', {'mustache': 'World'})

Python usage with file

import chevron

with open('file.mustache', 'r') as f:
    chevron.render(f, {'mustache': 'World'})

Python usage with unpacking

import chevron

args = {
  'template': 'Hello, {{ mustache }}!',

  'data': {
    'mustache': 'World'
  }
}

chevron.render(**args)

chevron supports partials (via dictionaries)

import chevron

args = {
    'template': 'Hello, {{> thing }}!',

    'partials_dict': {
        'thing': 'World'
    }
}

chevron.render(**args)

chevron supports partials (via the filesystem)

import chevron

args = {
    'template': 'Hello, {{> thing }}!',

    # defaults to .
    'partials_path': 'partials/',

    # defaults to mustache
    'partials_ext': 'ms',
}

# ./partials/thing.ms will be read and rendered
chevron.render(**args)

chevron supports lambdas

import chevron

def first(text, render):
    # return only first occurance of items
    result = render(text)
    return [ x.strip() for x in result.split(" || ") if x.strip() ][0]

def inject_x(text, render):
    # inject data into scope
    return render(text, {'x': 'data'})

args = {
    'template': 'Hello, {{# first}} {{x}} || {{y}} || {{z}} {{/ first}}!  {{# inject_x}} {{x}} {{/ inject_x}}',

    'data': {
        'y': 'foo',
        'z': 'bar',
        'first': first,
        'inject_x': inject_x
    }
}

chevron.render(**args)

INSTALL

$ git clone https://github.com/noahmorrison/chevron.git

or using submodules

$ git submodules add https://github.com/noahmorrison/chevron.git

Also available on pypi!

$ pip install chevron

TODO