NAME
    Template::Flute - Modern designer-friendly HTML templating Engine

VERSION
    Version 0.0010

SYNOPSIS
        use Template::Flute;

        my ($cart, $flute, %values);

        $cart = [{...},{...}];
        $values{cost} = ...

        $flute = new Template::Flute(specification_file => 'cart.xml',
                               template_file => 'cart.html',
                               iterators => {cart => $cart},
                               values => \%values,
                               );

        print $flute->process();

DESCRIPTION
    Template::Flute enables you to completely separate web design and
    programming tasks for dynamic web applications.

    Templates are designed to be designer-friendly; there's no inline code
    or mini templating language for your designers to learn - instead,
    standard HTML and CSS classes are used, leading to HTML that can easily
    be understood and edited by WYSIWYG editors and hand-coding designers
    alike.

    An example is easier than a wordy description:

    Given the following template snippet:

        <div class="customer_name">Mr A Test</div>
        <div class="customer_email">someone@example.com</div>

    and the following specification:

       <specification name="example" description="Example">
            <value name="customer_name" />
            <value name="email" field="customer_email" />
        </specification>

    Processing the above as follows:

        $flute = Template::Flute->new(
            template_file      => 'template.html',
            specification_file => 'spec.xml',
        );
        $flute->set_values({
            customer_name => 'Bob McTest',
            email => 'bob@example.com',
        });;
        print $flute->process;

    The resulting output would be:

        <div class="customer_name">Bob McTest</div>
        <div class="email">bob@example.com</div>

    In other words, rather than including a templating language within your
    templates which your designers must master and which could interfere
    with previews in WYSWYG tools, CSS selectors in the template are tied to
    your data structures or objects by a specification provided by the
    programmer.

  Workflow
    The easiest way to use Template::Flute is to pass all necessary
    parameters to the constructor and call the process method to generate
    the HTML.

    You can also break it down in separate steps:

    1. Parse specification
        Parse specification based on your specification format (e.g with
        Template::Flute::Specification::XML or
        Template::Flute::Specification::Scoped.).

            $xml_spec = new Template::Flute::Specification::XML;
            $spec = $xml_spec->parse(q{<specification name="cart" description="Cart">
                 <list name="cart" class="cartitem" iterator="cart">
                 <param name="name" field="title"/>
                 <param name="quantity"/>
                 <param name="price"/>
                 </list>
                 <value name="cost"/>
                 </specification>});

    2. Parse template
        Parse template with Template::Flute::HTML object.

            $template = new Template::Flute::HTML;
            $template->parse(q{<html>
                <head>
                <title>Cart Example</title>
                </head>
                <body>
                <table class="cart">
                <tr class="cartheader">
                <th>Name</th>
                <th>Quantity</th>
                <th>Price</th>
                </tr>
                <tr class="cartitem">
                <td class="name">Sample Book</td>
                <td><input class="quantity" name="quantity" size="3" value="10"></td>
                <td class="price">$1</td>
                </tr>
                <tr class="cartheader"><th colspan="2"></th><th>Total</th>
                </tr>
                <tr>
                <td colspan="2"></td><td class="cost">$10</td>
                </tr>
                </table>
                </body></html>},
                $spec);

    3. Produce HTML output
            $flute = new Template::Flute(template => $template,
                                       iterators => {cart => $cart},
                                       values => {cost => '84.94'});
            $flute->process();

CONSTRUCTOR
  new
    Create a Template::Flute object with the following parameters:

    specification_file
        Specification file name.

    specification_parser
        Select specification parser. This can be either the full class name
        like MyApp::Specification::Parser or the last part for classes
        residing in the Template::Flute::Specification namespace.

    specification
        Specification object or specification as string.

    template_file
        HTML template file.

    template
        Template::Flute::HTML object or template as string.

    database
        Template::Flute::Database::Rose object.

    filters
        Hash reference of filter functions.

    i18n
        Template::Flute::I18N object.

    iterators
        Hash references of iterators.

    values
        Hash reference of values to be used by the process method.

    auto_iterators
        Builds iterators automatically from values.

METHODS
  process [HASHREF]
    Processes HTML template, manipulates the HTML tree based on the
    specification, values and iterators.

    Returns HTML output.

  process_template
    Processes HTML template and returns Template::Flute::HTML object.

  filter FILTER VALUE
    Runs the filter named FILTER on VALUE and returns the result.

  value NAME
    Returns the value for NAME.

  set_values HASHREF
    Sets hash reference of values to be used by the process method. Same as
    passing the hash reference as values argument to the constructor.

  template
    Returns HTML template object.

  specification
    Returns specification object.

SPECIFICATION
    The specification ties the elements in the HTML template to the data
    (variables, lists, forms) which is added to the template.

    The default format for the specification is XML implemented by the
    Template::Flute::Specification::XML module. You can use the
    Config::Scoped format implemented by
    Template::Flute::Specification::Scoped module or write your own
    specification parser class.

    Possible elements in the specification are:

    container
        The first container is only shown in the output if the value
        `billing_address' is set:

          <container name="billing" value="billing_address" class="billingWrapper">
          </container>

        The second container is shown if the value `warnings' or the value
        `errors' is set:

          <container name="account_errors" value="warnings|errors" class="infobox">
          <value name="warnings"/>
          <value name="errors"/>
          </container>

    list
    param
    value
        Value elements are replaced with a single value present in the
        values hash passed to the constructor of this class or later set
        with the set_values method.

        The following operations are supported for value elements:

        hook
            Insert HTML residing in value as subtree of the corresponding
            HTML element. HTML will be parsed with XML::Twig.

        toggle
            Only shows corresponding HTML element if value is set.

        Other attributes for value elements are:

        include
            Processes the template file named in this attribute. This
            implies the hook operation.

    input
    filter
    sort
    i18n

ITERATORS
    Template::Flute uses iterators to retrieve list elements and insert them
    into the document tree. This abstraction relieves us from worrying about
    where the data actually comes from. We basically just need an array of
    hash references and an iterator class with a next and a count method.
    For your convenience you can create an iterator from
    Template::Flute::Iterator class very easily.

LIST
    Template::Flute::List

FORMS
    Template::Flute::Form

INCLUDES
    Files, especially components for web pages can be processed and included
    through value elements with the include attribute:

        <value name="sidebar" include="component.html"/>

    The result replaces the inner HTML of the following `div' tag:

        <div class="sidebar">
            Sample content
        </div>

AUTHOR
    Stefan Hornburg (Racke), <racke@linuxia.de>

BUGS
    Please report any bugs or feature requests to `bug-template-flute at
    rt.cpan.org', or through the web interface at
    http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Template-Flute.

SUPPORT
    You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

        perldoc Template::Flute

    You can also look for information at:

    * RT: CPAN's request tracker
        http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Template-Flute

    * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
        http://annocpan.org/dist/Template-Flute

    * CPAN Ratings
        http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Template-Flute

    * Search CPAN
        http://search.cpan.org/dist/Template-Flute/

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    Thanks to David Previous (bigpresh) for writing a much clearer
    introduction for Template::Flute.

    Thanks to Ton Verhagen for being a big supporter of my projects in all
    aspects.

    Thanks to Terrence Brannon for spotting a documentation mix-up.

HISTORY
    Template::Flute was initially named Template::Zoom. I renamed the module
    because of a request from Matt S. Trout, author of the HTML::Zoom
    module.

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
    Copyright 2010-2011 Stefan Hornburg (Racke) <racke@linuxia.de>.

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published
    by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

    See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.