# blazeT [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/johannesgerer/blazeT.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/johannesgerer/blazeT) [![Hackage](https://img.shields.io/hackage/v/blazeT.svg)](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/blazeT) A true monad (transformer) version of the [blaze-markup](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/blaze-markup) and [blaze-html](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/blaze-html) libraries: > BlazeHtml is a blazingly fast HTML combinator library for the > Haskell programming language. It embeds HTML templates in Haskell > code for optimal efficiency and composability. — from https://jaspervdj.be/blaze/. ## What’s wrong with blaze? Blaze’s `Markup` and `Html` **cannot be used as Monads**, let alone Monad transformers. While blaze's `Markup` and `Html` types have `Monad` instances and can leverage the concise `do` notation, they do not satisfy the [Monad Laws](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.8.0.0/docs/Control-Monad.html#t:Monad). ## How do Monads help? - Use Cases The `MarkupT` Monad Transformer enables us to write Markup (e.g. HTML) templates that have access to all those Monads you cannot live without anymore. The first things that come to mind: * Accessing an environment ([MonadReader](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/mtl-2.2.1/docs/Control-Monad-Reader-Class.html)) * Logging and other diagnostic output ([MonadWriter](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/mtl-2.2.1/docs/Control-Monad-Writer-Class.html)), * `IO` (e.g. for database access) The reason for the existence of this library is its use in [Lykah](http://johannesgerer.com/Lykah), which powers my personal website [http://johannesgerer.com](http://johannesgerer.com/johannesgerer.com). In Lykah, the HTML templates have access to the whole site structure (to build things like menus or blog post lists) and automatically check, insert and keep track of referenced pages and assets, which turns out to be very useful functionality of a static website generator. ## Usage ### Integrating with your existing code The library is intended to serve as a drop-in replacement for the `blaze-markup` and `blaze-html` libraries and should be backwards compatible: Simply replace your `module Text.Blaze.*` imports with `module Text.BlazeT.*` and it should give the same results. For usage of blaze check out their [documentation](https://jaspervdj.be/blaze/). ### Unleash the monads [Text.BlazeT](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/blazeT/docs/Text-BlazeT.html) exports `runWith` and `execWith`, which work on any `Text.BlazeT.Renderer.*`. The rendered markup will be returned within the base monad, whose actions can be [`lift`ed](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/transformers-0.5.2.0/docs/Control-Monad-Trans-Class.html) into the Markup, as shown in the following example (from [here](src/Readme.hs)): ```Haskell {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} import Data.Time (getCurrentTime) import Text.BlazeT.Html5 hiding (main) import Text.BlazeT.Renderer.String import Control.Monad.Trans.Class (lift) -- Backwords compatible Blaze HTML old :: Markup old = do p $ "created with blaze-html" -- BlazeT HTML with lifted IO actions new :: MarkupT IO () new = do time <- lift getCurrentTime p $ string $ "created with blazeT at " ++ show time main :: IO () main = do putStrLn $ renderMarkup old putStrLn =<< execWith renderMarkup new ``` prints: ```HTML

created with blaze-html

created with blazeT at 2016-10-26 01:09:16.969147361 UTC

``` ## Installation 1. To make it available on your system (or sandbox) use `cabal install blazeT`. 2. To play around with the source, obtain by cloning this repo or use `cabal get blazet`, enter the directory and run: ```bash cabal sandbox init #optional cabal install ``` ## Documentation on [Hackage](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/blazeT) ## Implementation ... is contained in [Text.BlazeT.Internals](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/blazeT/docs/Text-BlazeT-Internals.html). Everything is build around the simple `newtype` definition of the `MarkupT` transformer, which makes use the [Monoid](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.7.0.2/docs/Data-Monoid.html) instance of `Blaze.Markup` and is simply a `WriterT` writing `Blaze.Markup`: ```Haskell newtype MarkupT m a = MarkupT { fromMarkupT :: WriterT B.Markup m a } ``` The old `Text.Blaze.Markup` type is replaced by a rank-2 version of the transformer: ```Haskell type Markup = forall m . Monad m => MarkupT m () ``` Wrappers used to lift all `Blaze` entities into `BlazeT` are trivially expressible using basic `WriterT` class methods. Wrapping `Blaze.Markup` is simply `WriterT.tell`: ```Haskell wrapMarkupT :: Monad m => B.Markup -> MarkupT m () wrapMarkupT = tell ``` Wrapping functions that modify `Blaze.Markup` is simply `WriterT.censor`: ```Haskell wrapMarkupT2 :: Monad m => (B.Markup -> B.Markup) -> MarkupT m a -> MarkupT m a wrapMarkupT2 = censor ```