{- |
   Module      : Text.DocTemplates
   Copyright   : Copyright (C) 2009-2019 John MacFarlane
   License     : BSD3

   Maintainer  : John MacFarlane <jgm@berkeley.edu>
   Stability   : alpha
   Portability : portable

This is the text templating system used by pandoc. Its basic function is
to fill variables in a template. Variables are provided by a “context.”
Any instance of the @ToContext@ typeclass (such as an aeson @Value@) can
serve as the context, or a @Context@ value can be constructed manually.

Control structures are provided to test whether a variable has a
non-blank value and to iterate over the items of a list. Partials—that
is, subtemplates defined in different files—are supported. Filters can
be used to transform the values of variables or partials. The provided
filters make it possible to do list enumeration and tabular layout in
templates.

Templates are rendered to a doclayout @Doc@ (which is polymorphic in the
underlying string type). If @Doc@ values are used in the context,
rendered documents will be able to wrap flexibly on breaking spaces.
This feature makes doctemplates more suitable than other template
engines for plain-text formats (like Markdown).

Unlike the various HTML-centered template engines, doctemplates is
output-format agnostic, so no automatic escaping is done on interpolated
values. Values are assumed to be escaped properly in the Context.

== Example of use

> {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
> import Data.Text (Text)
> import qualified Data.Text.IO as T
> import Data.Aeson
> import Text.DocTemplates
> import Text.DocLayout (render)
>
> data Employee = Employee { firstName :: String
>                          , lastName  :: String
>                          , salary    :: Maybe Int }
> instance ToJSON Employee where
>   toJSON e = object [ "name" .= object [ "first" .= firstName e
>                                        , "last"  .= lastName e ]
>                     , "salary" .= salary e ]
>
> template :: Text
> template = "$for(employee)$Hi, $employee.name.first$. $if(employee.salary)$You make $employee.salary$.$else$No salary data.$endif$$sep$\n$endfor$"
>
> main :: IO ()
> main = do
>   res <- compileTemplate "mytemplate.txt" template
>   case res of
>          Left e    -> error e
>          Right t   -> T.putStrLn $ render Nothing $ renderTemplate t $ object
>                         ["employee" .=
>                           [ Employee "John" "Doe" Nothing
>                           , Employee "Omar" "Smith" (Just 30000)
>                           , Employee "Sara" "Chen" (Just 60000) ]
>                         ]

== Delimiters

To mark variables and control structures in the template, either @$@…@$@
or @${@…@}@ may be used as delimiters. The styles may also be mixed in
the same template, but the opening and closing delimiter must match in
each case. The opening delimiter may be followed by one or more spaces
or tabs, which will be ignored. The closing delimiter may be followed by
one or more spaces or tabs, which will be ignored.

To include a literal @$@ in the document, use @$$@.

== Comments

Anything between the sequence @$--@ and the end of the line will be
treated as a comment and omitted from the output.

== Interpolated variables

A slot for an interpolated variable is a variable name surrounded by
matched delimiters. Variable names must begin with a letter and can
contain letters, numbers, @_@, @-@, and @.@. The keywords @it@, @if@,
@else@, @endif@, @for@, @sep@, and @endfor@ may not be used as variable
names. Examples:

> $foo$
> $foo.bar.baz$
> $foo_bar.baz-bim$
> $ foo $
> ${foo}
> ${foo.bar.baz}
> ${foo_bar.baz-bim}
> ${ foo }

The values of variables are determined by the @Context@ that is passed
as a parameter to @renderTemplate@. So, for example, @title@ will return
the value of the @title@ field, and @employee.salary@ will return the
value of the @salary@ field of the object that is the value of the
@employee@ field.

-   If the value of the variable is simple value, it will be rendered
    verbatim. (Note that no escaping is done; the assumption is that the
    calling program will escape the strings appropriately for the output
    format.)
-   If the value is a list, the values will be concatenated.
-   If the value is a map, the string @true@ will be rendered.
-   Every other value will be rendered as the empty string.

When a @Context@ is derived from an aeson (JSON) @Value@, the following
conversions are done:

-   If the value is a number, it will be rendered as an integer if
    possible, otherwise as a floating-point number.
-   If the value is a JSON boolean, it will be rendered as @true@ if
    true, and as the empty string if false.

== Conditionals

A conditional begins with @if(variable)@ (enclosed in matched
delimiters) and ends with @endif@ (enclosed in matched delimiters). It
may optionally contain an @else@ (enclosed in matched delimiters). The
@if@ section is used if @variable@ has a non-empty value, otherwise the
@else@ section is used (if present). (Note that even the string @false@
counts as a true value.) Examples:

> $if(foo)$bar$endif$
>
> $if(foo)$
>   $foo$
> $endif$
>
> $if(foo)$
> part one
> $else$
> part two
> $endif$
>
> ${if(foo)}bar${endif}
>
> ${if(foo)}
>   ${foo}
> ${endif}
>
> ${if(foo)}
> ${ foo.bar }
> ${else}
> no foo!
> ${endif}

The keyword @elseif@ may be used to simplify complex nested
conditionals. Thus

> $if(foo)$
> XXX
> $elseif(bar)$
> YYY
> $else$
> ZZZ
> $endif$

is equivalent to

> $if(foo)$
> XXX
> $else$
> $if(bar)$
> YYY
> $else$
> ZZZ
> $endif$
> $endif$

== For loops

A for loop begins with @for(variable)@ (enclosed in matched delimiters)
and ends with @endfor@ (enclosed in matched delimiters.

-   If @variable@ is an array, the material inside the loop will be
    evaluated repeatedly, with @variable@ being set to each value of the
    array in turn, and concatenated.
-   If @variable@ is a map, the material inside will be set to the map.
-   If the value of the associated variable is not an array or a map, a
    single iteration will be performed on its value.

Examples:

> $for(foo)$$foo$$sep$, $endfor$
>
> $for(foo)$
>   - $foo.last$, $foo.first$
> $endfor$
>
> ${ for(foo.bar) }
>   - ${ foo.bar.last }, ${ foo.bar.first }
> ${ endfor }
>
> $for(mymap)$
> $it.name$: $it.office$
> $endfor$

You may optionally specify a separator between consecutive values using
@sep@ (enclosed in matched delimiters). The material between @sep@ and
the @endfor@ is the separator.

> ${ for(foo) }${ foo }${ sep }, ${ endfor }

Instead of using @variable@ inside the loop, the special anaphoric
keyword @it@ may be used.

> ${ for(foo.bar) }
>   - ${ it.last }, ${ it.first }
> ${ endfor }

== Partials

Partials (subtemplates stored in different files) may be included using
the syntax

> ${ boilerplate() }

The partials are obtained using @getPartial@ from the @TemplateMonad@
class. This may be implemented differently in different monads. The path
passed to @getPartial@ is computed on the basis of the original template
path (a parameter to @compileTemplate@) and the partial’s name. The
partial’s name is substituted for the /base name/ of the original
template path (leaving the original template’s extension), unless the
partial has an explicit extension, in which case this is kept. So, with
the @TemplateMonad@ instance for IO, partials will be sought in the
directory containing the main template, and will be assumed to have the
extension of the main template.

Partials may optionally be applied to variables using a colon:

> ${ date:fancy() }
>
> ${ articles:bibentry() }

If @articles@ is an array, this will iterate over its values, applying
the partial @bibentry()@ to each one. So the second example above is
equivalent to

> ${ for(articles) }
> ${ it:bibentry() }
> ${ endfor }

Note that the anaphoric keyword @it@ must be used when iterating over
partials. In the above examples, the @bibentry@ partial should contain
@it.title@ (and so on) instead of @articles.title@.

Final newlines are omitted from included partials.

Partials may include other partials. If you exceed a nesting level of
50, though, in resolving partials, the literal @(loop)@ will be
returned, to avoid infinite loops.

A separator between values of an array may be specified in square
brackets, immediately after the variable name or partial:

> ${months[, ]}$
>
> ${articles:bibentry()[; ]$

The separator in this case is literal and (unlike with @sep@ in an
explicit @for@ loop) cannot contain interpolated variables or other
template directives.

== Nesting

To ensure that content is “nested,” that is, subsequent lines indented,
use the @^@ directive:

> $item.number$  $^$$item.description$ ($item.price$)

In this example, if @item.description@ has multiple lines, they will all
be indented to line up with the first line:

> 00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old
>        Oban whiskey. ($148)

To nest multiple lines to the same level, align them with the @^@
directive in the template. For example:

> $item.number$  $^$$item.description$ ($item.price$)
>                (Available til $item.sellby$.)

will produce

> 00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old
>        Oban whiskey. ($148)
>        (Available til March 30, 2020.)

If a variable occurs by itself on a line, preceded by whitespace and not
followed by further text or directives on the same line, and the
variable’s value contains multiple lines, it will be nested
automatically.

== Breakable spaces

When rendering to a @Doc@, a distinction can be made between breakable
and unbreakable spaces. Normally, spaces in the template itself (as
opposed to values of the interpolated variables) are not breakable, but
they can be made breakable in part of the template by using the @~@
keyword (ended with another @~@).

> $~$This long line may break if the document is rendered
> with a short line length.$~$

The @~@ keyword has no effect when rendering to @Text@ or @String@.

== Filters

A filter transforms the value of a variable or partial. Filters are
specified using a slash (@\/@) between the variable name (or partial)
and the filter name. Example:

> $for(name)$
> $name/uppercase$
> $endfor$
>
> $for(metadata/pairs)$
> - $it.key$: $it.value$
> $endfor$
>
> $employee:name()/uppercase$

Filters may be chained:

> $for(employees/pairs)$
> $it.key/alpha/uppercase$. $it.name$
> $endfor$

Some filters take parameters:

> |----------------------|------------|
> $for(employee)$
> $it.name.first/uppercase/left 20 "| "$$it.name.salary/right 10 " | " " |"$
> $endfor$
> |----------------------|------------|

Currently the following filters are predefined:

-   @pairs@: Converts a map or array to an array of maps, each with
    @key@ and @value@ fields. If the original value was an array, the
    @key@ will be the array index, starting with 1.

-   @uppercase@: Converts text to uppercase.

-   @lowercase@: Converts text to lowercase.

-   @length@: Returns the length of the value: number of characters for
    a textual value, number of elements for a map or array.

-   @reverse@: Reverses a textual value or array, and has no effect on
    other values.

-   @chomp@: Removes trailing newlines (and breakable space).

-   @nowrap@: Disables line wrapping on breakable spaces.

-   @alpha@: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer into
    lowercase alphabetic characters @a..z@ (mod 26). This can be used to
    get lettered enumeration from array indices. To get uppercase
    letters, chain with @uppercase@.

-   @roman@: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer into
    lowercase roman numerials. This can be used to get lettered
    enumeration from array indices. To get uppercase roman, chain with
    @uppercase@.

-   @left n \"leftborder\" \"rightborder\"@: Renders a textual value in
    a block of width @n@, aligned to the left, with an optional left and
    right border. Has no effect on other values. This can be used to
    align material in tables. Widths are positive integers indicating
    the number of characters. Borders are strings inside double quotes;
    literal @\"@ and @\\@ characters must be backslash-escaped.

-   @right n \"leftborder\" \"rightborder\"@: Renders a textual value in
    a block of width @n@, aligned to the right, and has no effect on
    other values.

-   @center n \"leftborder\" \"rightborder\"@: Renders a textual value
    in a block of width @n@, aligned to the center, and has no effect on
    other values.

-}

module Text.DocTemplates ( renderTemplate
                         , compileTemplate
                         , compileTemplateFile
                         , applyTemplate
                         , TemplateMonad(..)
                         , TemplateTarget
                         , Context(..)
                         , Val(..)
                         , ToContext(..)
                         , FromContext(..)
                         , Template  -- export opaque type
                         , Doc(..)
                         ) where

import qualified Data.Text.IO as TIO
import Text.DocLayout (Doc(..))
import Data.Text (Text)
import Text.DocTemplates.Parser (compileTemplate)
import Text.DocTemplates.Internal ( TemplateMonad(..), Context(..),
            Val(..), ToContext(..), FromContext(..), TemplateTarget,
            Template, renderTemplate )

-- | Compile a template from a file.  IO errors will be
-- raised as exceptions; template parsing errors result in
-- Left return values.
compileTemplateFile :: TemplateTarget a
                    => FilePath -> IO (Either String (Template a))
compileTemplateFile templPath = do
  templateText <- TIO.readFile templPath
  compileTemplate templPath templateText

-- | Compile a template and apply it to a context.  This is
-- just a convenience function composing 'compileTemplate'
-- and 'renderTemplate'.  If a template will be rendered
-- more than once in the same process, compile it separately
-- for better performance.
applyTemplate :: (TemplateMonad m, TemplateTarget a, ToContext a b)
           => FilePath -> Text -> b -> m (Either String (Doc a))
applyTemplate fp t val = do
    res <- compileTemplate fp t
    case res of
      Left   s  -> return $ Left s
      Right  t' -> return $ Right $ renderTemplate t' val