Airspeed is a powerful and easy-to-use templating engine for Python that aims for a high level of compatibility with the popular Velocity library for Java.
- Compatible with Velocity templates
- Compatible with Python 2.1 and greater, including Jython
- Features include macros definitions, conditionals, sub-templates and much more
- Airspeed is already being put to serious use
- Comprehensive set of unit tests; the entire library was written test-first
- Reasonably fast, especially when used with mod_python
- A single Python module of a few kilobytes, and not the 500kb of Velocity
- Liberal licence (BSD-style)
A number of excellent templating mechanisms already exist for Python, including Cheetah, which has a syntax similar to Airspeed.
However, in making Airspeed's syntax identical to that of Velocity, our goal is to allow Python programmers to prototype, replace or extend Java code that relies on Velocity.
A simple example:
t = airspeed.Template("""
Old people:
#foreach ($person in $people)
#if($person.age > 95)
$person.name
#end
#end
""")
people = [{'name': 'Bill', 'age': 100}, {'name': 'Bob', 'age': 90}]
print t.merge(locals())
You can also use "Loaders" to allow templates to include each other using the #include
or #parse
directives:
% cat /tmp/1.txt
Bingo!
% cat /tmp/2.txt
#parse ("2.txt")
% python
Python 2.4.4 (#1, May 28 2007, 00:47:43)
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 5367)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from airspeed import CachingFileLoader
>>> loader = CachingFileLoader("/tmp")
>>> template = loader.load_template("1.txt")
>>> template.merge({}, loader=loader)
'Bingo!\n'
All Airspeed templates should work correctly with Velocity. The vast majority of Velocity templates will work correctly with Airspeed.
Airspeed currently implements a very significant subset of the
Velocity functionality, including $variables
, the #if
, #foreach
,
#macro
, #include
and #parse
directives, and "$interpolated #strings()"
. Templates are unicode-safe.
Compound expressions in #set
directives should be parenthesised, since
no implicit operator precedence rules are implemented.
The output of templates in Airspeed is not yet 'whitespace compatible' with Velocity's rendering of the same templates, which generally does not matter for web applications. We also have still to implement support for in-line math expressions and some rarely-used details such as map literals.
https://github.com/purcell/sanityinc
The Velocity User Guide shows how to write templates. Our unit tests show how to use the templates from your code.
Please feel free to create tickets for bugs or desired features.
Airspeed was conceived by Chris Tarttelin, and implemented jointly in a test-driven manner by Steve Purcell and Chris Tarttelin. We can be contacted by e-mail by using our first names (at) pythonconsulting dot com.