ERB – Ruby Templating
Introduction
ERB provides an easy to use but powerful templating system for Ruby. Using ERB, actual Ruby code can be added to any plain text document for the purposes of generating document information details and/or flow control.
A very simple example is this:
require 'erb' x = 42 template = ERB.new <<-EOF The value of x is: <%= x %> EOF puts template.result(binding)
Prints: The value of x is: 42
More complex examples are given below.
Recognized Tags
ERB recognizes certain tags in the provided template and converts them based on the rules below:
<% Ruby code -- inline with output %> <%= Ruby expression -- replace with result %> <%# comment -- ignored -- useful in testing %> % a line of Ruby code -- treated as <% line %> (optional -- see ERB.new) %% replaced with % if first thing on a line and % processing is used <%% or %%> -- replace with <% or %> respectively
All other text is passed through ERB filtering unchanged.
Options
There are several settings you can change when you use ERB:
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the nature of the tags that are recognized;
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the value of $SAFE under which the template is run;
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the binding used to resolve local variables in the template.
See the ERB.new and ERB#result methods for more detail.
Character encodings
ERB (or Ruby code generated by ERB) returns a string in the same character encoding as the input string. When the input string has a magic comment, however, it returns a string in the encoding specified by the magic comment.
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- require 'erb' template = ERB.new <<EOF <%#-*- coding: Big5 -*-%> \_\_ENCODING\_\_ is <%= \_\_ENCODING\_\_ %>. EOF puts template.result
Prints: __ENCODING__ is Big5.
Examples
Plain Text
ERB is useful for any generic templating situation. Note that in this example, we use the convenient “% at start of line” tag, and we quote the template literally with %q{...} to avoid trouble with the backslash.
require "erb" # Create template. template = %q{ From: James Edward Gray II <james@grayproductions.net> To: <%= to %> Subject: Addressing Needs <%= to[/\w+/] %>: Just wanted to send a quick note assuring that your needs are being addressed. I want you to know that my team will keep working on the issues, especially: <%# ignore numerous minor requests -- focus on priorities %> % priorities.each do |priority| * <%= priority %> % end Thanks for your patience. James Edward Gray II }.gsub(/^ /, '') message = ERB.new(template, 0, "%<>") # Set up template data. to = "Community Spokesman <spokesman@ruby_community.org>" priorities = [ "Run Ruby Quiz", "Document Modules", "Answer Questions on Ruby Talk" ] # Produce result. email = message.result puts email
Generates:
From: James Edward Gray II <james@grayproductions.net> To: Community Spokesman <spokesman@ruby_community.org> Subject: Addressing Needs Community: Just wanted to send a quick note assuring that your needs are being addressed. I want you to know that my team will keep working on the issues, especially: * Run Ruby Quiz * Document Modules * Answer Questions on Ruby Talk Thanks for your patience. James Edward Gray II
Ruby in HTML
ERB is often used in .rhtml files (HTML with embedded Ruby). Notice the need in this example to provide a special binding when the template is run, so that the instance variables in the Product object can be resolved.
require "erb" # Build template data class. class Product def initialize( code, name, desc, cost ) @code = code @name = name @desc = desc @cost = cost @features = [ ] end def add_feature( feature ) @features << feature end # Support templating of member data. def get_binding binding end # ... end # Create template. template = %{ <html> <head><title>Ruby Toys -- <%= @name %></title></head> <body> <h1><%= @name %> (<%= @code %>)</h1> <p><%= @desc %></p> <ul> <% @features.each do |f| %> <li><b><%= f %></b></li> <% end %> </ul> <p> <% if @cost < 10 %> <b>Only <%= @cost %>!!!</b> <% else %> Call for a price, today! <% end %> </p> </body> </html> }.gsub(/^ /, '') rhtml = ERB.new(template) # Set up template data. toy = Product.new( "TZ-1002", "Rubysapien", "Geek's Best Friend! Responds to Ruby commands...", 999.95 ) toy.add_feature("Listens for verbal commands in the Ruby language!") toy.add_feature("Ignores Perl, Java, and all C variants.") toy.add_feature("Karate-Chop Action!!!") toy.add_feature("Matz signature on left leg.") toy.add_feature("Gem studded eyes... Rubies, of course!") # Produce result. rhtml.run(toy.get_binding)
Generates (some blank lines removed):
<html> <head><title>Ruby Toys -- Rubysapien</title></head> <body> <h1>Rubysapien (TZ-1002)</h1> <p>Geek's Best Friend! Responds to Ruby commands...</p> <ul> <li><b>Listens for verbal commands in the Ruby language!</b></li> <li><b>Ignores Perl, Java, and all C variants.</b></li> <li><b>Karate-Chop Action!!!</b></li> <li><b>Matz signature on left leg.</b></li> <li><b>Gem studded eyes... Rubies, of course!</b></li> </ul> <p> Call for a price, today! </p> </body> </html>
Notes
There are a variety of templating solutions available in various Ruby projects:
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ERB’s big brother, eRuby, works the same but is written in C for speed;
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Amrita (smart at producing HTML/XML);
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cs/Template (written in C for speed);
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RDoc, distributed with Ruby, uses its own template engine, which can be reused elsewhere;
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and others; search RubyGems.org or The Ruby Toolbox.
Rails, the web application framework, uses ERB to create views.
Constants
Revision = '$Date:: $'
Attributes
[RW] | lineno |
The optional lineno argument passed to Kernel#eval when the ERB code is run |
[RW] | filename |
The optional filename argument passed to Kernel#eval when the ERB code is run |
[R] | encoding |
The encoding to eval |
[R] | src |