pencil-0.1.3: Static site generator

Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Pencil

Contents

Synopsis

Getting started

To get started, let's look at this example, which is a very simple website with only a couple of pages. Browse through the site folder to see the source web pages we'll be using. You can run this example by following the instructions found in the README.md.

First, we have layout.html, which will serve as the layout of all our pages. Notice that layout.html contains strings that look like ${title} and ${body}. These are variable directives that we'll need to fill values in for.

index.markdown is a pretty basic Markdown file, and style.scss is a Scss file.

Now let's look inside Main.hs:

import Pencil

config :: Config
config =
  (updateEnv (insertText "title" "My Simple Website") .
   setSourceDir "examples/Simple/site/" .
   setOutputDir "examples/Simple/out/") defaultConfig

website :: PencilApp ()
website = do
  layout <- load toHtml "layout.html"
  index <- load toHtml "index.markdown"
  render (layout <|| index)

  renderCss "style.scss"

main :: IO ()
  main = run website config

First, we need to set up a Config. We start with defaultConfig, and modify it slightly, specifying where the source files live, and where we want the output files to go. We also add a title variable with the value "My Simple Website" into the environment.

An Env, or environment, is just a mapping of variables to its values. A variable can hold a string, number, boolean, date, and so forth. Once a variable is defined, we can use that variable in our web pages via a variable directive like ${title}.

Let's now look at the website function. Note that its type is PencilApp (). PencilApp is the monad transformer that web pages are built under. Don't worry if you aren't familiar with monad transformers; in simple terms, PencilApp is a function that takes a Config, and does all the source file loading and web page rendering under the IO monad. So website is a function that is waiting for a Config. We "give" website a Config with this code, which is the main function:

run website config

Now let's dissect the website function itself. The first thing we do is load toHtml "layout.html", which loads our layout file into something called a Page. In short, a Page holds the contents of the file, plus the environment of that file, plus the final output destination of that file if it is rendered. The toHtml function tells load that you want the output file to have the .html extension.

It's important to realize that toHtml is not telling load how to load layout.html; it's telling it what kind of file you want when you spit it out. load itself looks at the file extension to figure out that layout.html is an HTML file, and index.markdown is a Markdown file. So we use toHtml when loading index.markdown because we want the index page to be rendered as an .html file.

Now, what about render (layout <|| index). What the heck is going on here? In plain language, you can think of (layout <|| index) as injecting the contents of index into layout. The way this works is that the contents of index is rendered (Markdown is converted to HTML, variable directives are resolved through the given environment, etc) and then stuffed into a special body variable in layout's environment. When layout is rendered, the variable directive ${body} in layout is replaced with the contents of index.

(layout <|| index) describes what will happen; it forms a Structure. Passing it into render is what actually generates the web page.

Finally, we have renderCss "style.scss", which is a helper method to load and render CSS files in one step.

And that's it! If you run this code, it will spit out an index.html file and a style.css file in the examples/Simple/out/ folder.

To learn more, read through the documentation found in this module. To build a blog, look at the Pencil.Blog module.

Templates

Pencil comes with a simple templating engine. Templates allow us to build web pages dynamically using Haskell code. This allows us to build modular components. Templates can be used for things like shared page layouts, navigation and blog post templates.

Pencil templates are regular text files that can contain a preamble and directives.

Preamble

Preambles are YAML-formatted environment variable declarations inside your source files. They should be declared at the top of the file, and you may only have one preamble per source file. Example preamble, in the first part of my-blog-post.markdown:

<!--PREAMBLE
postTitle: "Behind Python's unittest.main()"
date: 2010-01-30
tags:
  - python
-->

In the above example, Pencil will intelligently parse the date value as a VDateTime.

Directives

Directives are rendering commands. They are surrounded by ${...}.

Variables

The simplest directive is the variable directive.

Hello ${name}!

The above template will render the value of the variable name, which is expected to be in the environment at render. If the variable is not found, Pencil will throw an exception with some debugging information.

If block

The if directive allows us to render content based off the existence of a variable in the current environment.

${if(name)}
  Hello ${name}!
${end}

In this case, we now make sure that name is available before rendering.

For loop

The for directive allows us to loop over array type variable. This is useful for things like rendering a list of blog post titles, and URLs to the individual blog posts.

<ul>
${for(posts)}
  <li><a href="${this.url}">${postTitle}</a> - ${date}</li>
${end}
</ul>

Assuming that posts exists in our environment as an array of Value, this will render each post's title, publish date, and will link it to this.url. Note that inside the for block, you have access to the current environment's variables. This is why we're able to simply request ${postTitle}—it is the current post's postTitle that will be rendered.

this.url is a special variable that is automatically inserted for you inside a loaded Page. It points to the final file path destination of that current Page.

Partials

The partial directive injects another template file into the current file. The directives inside the partial are rendered in the same environmental context as the partial directive.

Think of partials as just copy-and-pasting snippet from one file to another. Unlike Structures, partials cannot define environment variables.

In the example below, the first partial is rendered with the current environment. The partial inside the for loop receives the same environemnt as any other snippet inside the loop, and thus has access to the environment inside each post.

${partial("partials/nav-bar.html")}

${for(posts)}
  ${partial("partials/nav-bar.html")}
${end}

type PencilApp = ReaderT Config (ExceptT PencilException IO) Source #

The main monad transformer stack for a Pencil application.

This unrolls to:

PencilApp a = Config -> IO (Except PencilException a)

The ExceptT monad allows us to catch "checked" exceptions; errors that we know how to handle, in PencilException. Note that Unknown "unchecked" exceptions can still go through IO.

run :: PencilApp a -> Config -> IO () Source #

Run the Pencil app.

Note that this can throw a fatal exception.

Pages, Structures and Resources

Page, Structure and Resource are the "big three" data types you need to know to effectively use Pencil.

data Page Source #

The Page is an important data type in Pencil. It contains the parsed template of a file (e.g. of Markdown or HTML files). It may have template directives (e.g. ${body}) that has not yet been rendered, and an environment loaded from the preamble section of the file. A Page also contains pageFilePath, which is the output file path.

Instances
Eq Page Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

(==) :: Page -> Page -> Bool #

(/=) :: Page -> Page -> Bool #

Show Page Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

showsPrec :: Int -> Page -> ShowS #

show :: Page -> String #

showList :: [Page] -> ShowS #

Render Structure Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Render Page Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

render :: Page -> PencilApp () Source #

getPageEnv :: Page -> Env Source #

Returns the Env from a Page.

setPageEnv :: Env -> Page -> Page Source #

Sets the Env in a Page.

load :: (FilePath -> FilePath) -> FilePath -> PencilApp Page Source #

Loads a file into a Page, rendering the file (as determined by the file extension) into the proper output format (e.g. Markdown rendered to HTML, SCSS to CSS). Parses the template directives and preamble variables into its environment. The Page's pageFilePath is determined by the given function, which expects the original file path, and returns the designated file path.

The Page's designated file path is calculated and stored in the Page's environment in the variable this.url. This allows the template to use ${this.url} to refer to the designated file path.

Example:

-- Loads index.markdown with the designated file path of index.html
load toHtml "index.markdown"

-- Keep the file path as-is
load id "about.html"

withEnv :: Env -> PencilApp a -> PencilApp a Source #

Runs the computation with the given environment. This is useful when you want to render a Page or Structure with a modified environment.

withEnv (insertText "newvar" "newval" env) (render page)

renderCss :: FilePath -> PencilApp () Source #

Loads and renders file as CSS.

-- Load, convert and render as style.css.
renderCss "style.sass"

type Structure = NonEmpty Page Source #

A Structure is a list of Pages, defining a nesting order. Think of them like Russian nesting dolls. The first element defines the outer-most container, and subsequent elements are inside the previous element.

You commonly use Structures to insert a Page containing content (e.g. a blog post) into a container (e.g. a layout shared across all your web pages).

Build structures using structure, <|| and <|.

layout <- load toHtml "layout.html"
index <- load toHtml "index.markdown"
about <- load toHtml "about.markdown"
render (layout <|| index)
render (layout <|| about)

In the example above we load a layout Page, which can be an HTML page defining the outer structures like <html></html>. Assuming layout.html has the template directive ${body} (note that body is a special variable generated during structure-building), layout <|| index tells render that you want the rendered body of index to be injected into the ${body} directive inside of layout.

Structures also control the closure of variables. Variables defined in a Pages are accessible both by Pages above and below. This allows inner Pages to define variables like the blog post title, which may be used in the outer Page to set the <title> tag.

In this way, Structure allows efficient Page reuse. See the private function apply to learn more about how Structures are evaluated.

Note that this differs than the ${partial(...)} directive, which has no such variable closures. The partial directive is much simpler—think of them as copy-and-pasting snippets from one file to another. The partial has has the same environment as the parent context.

(<||) :: Page -> Page -> Structure Source #

Creates a new Structure from two Pages.

layout <- load toHtml "layout.html"
index <- load toHtml "index.markdown"
render (layout <|| index)

(<|) :: Structure -> Page -> Structure Source #

Pushes Page into Structure.

layout <- load toHtml "layout.html"
blogLayout <- load toHtml "blog-layout.html"
blogPost <- load toHtml "myblogpost.markdown"
render (layout <|| blogLayout <| blogPost)

structure :: Page -> Structure Source #

Converts a Page into a Structure.

data Resource Source #

Use Resource to load and render files that don't need any manipulation other than conversion (e.g. Sass to CSS), or for static files that you want to copy as-is (e.g. binary files like images, or text files that require no other processing).

Use passthrough, loadResource and loadResources to build a Resource from a file.

In the example below, robots.txt and everything in the images/ directory will be rendered as-is.

passthrough "robots.txt" >> render
loadResources id True True "images/" >> render
Instances
Render Resource Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

render :: Resource -> PencilApp () Source #

loadResource :: (FilePath -> FilePath) -> FilePath -> PencilApp Resource Source #

Loads a file as a Resource. Use this for binary files (e.g. images) and for files without template directives. Regular files are still converted to their web page formats (e.g. Markdown to HTML, SASS to CSS).

-- Loads and renders the image as-is. Underneath the hood
-- this is just a file copy.
loadResource id "images/profile.jpg" >> render

-- Loads and renders to about.index
loadResource toHtml "about.markdown" >> render

loadResources Source #

Arguments

:: (FilePath -> FilePath) 
-> Bool

Recursive if True.

-> Bool

Handle as pass-throughs (file copy) if True.

-> FilePath 
-> PencilApp [Resource] 

Loads file in given directory as Resources.

passthrough :: FilePath -> PencilApp Resource Source #

Loads file as a pass-through. There is no content conversion, and template directives are ignored. In essence this is a file copy.

passthrough "robots.txt" >> render

listDir Source #

Arguments

:: Bool

Recursive if True.

-> FilePath 
-> PencilApp [FilePath] 

Lists files in given directory. The file paths returned is prefixed with the given directory.

class Render a where Source #

To render something is to create the output web pages, rendering template directives into their final form using the current environment.

Methods

render :: a -> PencilApp () Source #

Renders a as web page(s).

Instances
Render Structure Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Render Resource Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

render :: Resource -> PencilApp () Source #

Render Page Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

render :: Page -> PencilApp () Source #

Render r => Render [r] Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

render :: [r] -> PencilApp () Source #

toHtml :: FilePath -> FilePath Source #

Replaces the file path's extension with .html.

load toHtml "about.markdown"

toDir :: FilePath -> FilePath Source #

Converts a file path into a directory name, dropping the extension. Pages with a directory as its FilePath is rendered as an index file in that directory. For example, the pages/about.html is transformed into pages/about/, which render would render the Page to the file path pages/about/index.html.

toCss :: FilePath -> FilePath Source #

Replaces the file path's extension with .css.

load toCss "style.sass"

toExpected :: FilePath -> FilePath Source #

Converts file path into the expected extensions. This means .markdown become .html, .sass becomes .css, and so forth. See extensionMap for conversion table.

-- Load everything inside the "assets/" folder, renaming converted files as
-- expected, and leaving everything else alone.
loadResources toExpected True True "assets/"

Environment Manipulation

merge :: Env -> Env -> Env Source #

Merges two Envs together, biased towards the left-hand Env on duplicates.

insertEnv Source #

Arguments

:: Text

Environment variable name.

-> Value

Value to insert.

-> Env

Environment to modify.

-> Env 

Insert Value into the given Env.

insertText Source #

Arguments

:: Text

Environment variable name.

-> Text

Text to insert.

-> Env

Environment to modify.

-> Env 

Insert text into the given Env.

env <- asks getEnv
insertText "title" "My Awesome Website" env

insertPages Source #

Arguments

:: Text

Environment variable name.

-> [Page]

Pages to insert.

-> Env

Environment to modify.

-> Env 

Insert Pages into the given Env.

posts <- loadBlogPosts "blog/"
env <- asks getEnv
insertPages "posts" posts env

updateEnvVal Source #

Arguments

:: (Value -> Value) 
-> Text

Environment variable name.

-> Env 
-> Env 

Modify a variable in the given environment.

sortByVar Source #

Arguments

:: Text

Environment variable name.

-> (Value -> Value -> Ordering)

Ordering function to compare Value against. If the variable is not in the Env, the Page will be placed at the bottom of the order.

-> [Page] 
-> [Page] 

Sort given Pages by the specified ordering function.

filterByVar Source #

Arguments

:: Bool

If true, include pages without the specified variable.

-> Text

Environment variable name.

-> (Value -> Bool) 
-> [Page] 
-> [Page] 

Filter by a variable's value in the environment.

groupByElements Source #

Arguments

:: Text

Environment variable name.

-> [Page] 
-> HashMap Text [Page] 

Given a variable (whose value is assumed to be an array of VText) and list of pages, group the pages by the VText found in the variable.

For example, say each Page has a variable "tags" that is a list of tags. The first Page has a "tags" variable that is an VArray [VText "a"], and the second Page has a "tags" variable that is an VArray [VText "a", VText "b"]. The final output would be a map fromList [("a", [page1, page2]), ("b", [page2])].

Configuration

data Config Source #

The main Config needed to build your website. Your app's Config is passed into the PencilApp monad transformer.

Use defaultConfig as a starting point, along with the config-modification helpers such as setSourceDir.

Instances
Default Config Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

def :: Config #

defaultConfig :: Config Source #

This default Config gives you everything you need to start.

Default values:

Config
 { configSourceDir = "site/"
 , configOutputDir = "out/"
 , configEnv = HashMap.empty
 , configDisplayValue = toText
 , configSassOptions = Text.Sass.Options.defaultSassOptions
 , configPandocReaderOptions = Text.Pandoc.def {
      Text.Pandoc.readerExtensions = Text.Pandoc.Extensions.getDefaultExtensions "markdown"
   }
 , configPandocWriterOptions = Text.Pandoc.def { Text.Pandoc.writerHighlightStyle = Just Text.Pandoc.Highlighting.monochrome }
 , 'configDisplayValue = toText
 }

getSourceDir :: Config -> FilePath Source #

The directory path of your web page source files.

setSourceDir :: FilePath -> Config -> Config Source #

Sets the source directory of your web page source files.

getOutputDir :: Config -> FilePath Source #

The directory path of your rendered web pages.

setOutputDir :: FilePath -> Config -> Config Source #

Sets the output directory of your rendered web pages.

getEnv :: Config -> Env Source #

The environment of the Config, which is what the PencilApp monad transformer uses. This is where variables are set for rendering template directives.

setEnv :: Env -> Config -> Config Source #

Sets the current environment. You may also want to look at withEnv if you want to render things in a modified environment.

updateEnv :: (Env -> Env) -> Config -> Config Source #

Update the Env inside the Config.

getDisplayValue :: Config -> Value -> Text Source #

The function that renders Value to text.

setDisplayValue :: (Value -> Text) -> Config -> Config Source #

Sets the function that renders Value to text. Overwrite this with your own function if you would like to change how certain Values are rendered (e.g. VDateTime).

myRender :: Value -> T.Text
myRender (VDateTime dt) = pack $ formatTime defaultTimeLocale "%e %B %Y" dt
myRender t = toText t

...

setDisplayValue myRender config

In the above example, we change the VDateTime rendering to show 25 December 2017. Leave everything else unchanged.

getSassOptions :: Config -> SassOptions Source #

The SassOptions for rendering Sass/Scss files.

getPandocReaderOptions :: Config -> ReaderOptions Source #

The ReaderOptions for reading files that use Pandoc. Supported formats by Pencil are: Markdown.

setPandocReaderOptions :: ReaderOptions -> Config -> Config Source #

Sets the ReaderOptions. For example, you may want to enable some Pandoc extensions like Ext_literate_haskell:

setPandocReaderOptions
  (Text.Pandoc.def { readerExtensions = extensionsFromList [Ext_literate_haskell] })
  config

getPandocWriterOptions :: Config -> WriterOptions Source #

The WriterOptions for rendering files that use Pandoc. Supported formats by Pencil are: Markdown.

Utils and re-exports

data FileType Source #

Enum for file types that can be parsed and converted by Pencil.

Instances
Eq FileType Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Generic FileType Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Associated Types

type Rep FileType :: Type -> Type #

Methods

from :: FileType -> Rep FileType x #

to :: Rep FileType x -> FileType #

Hashable FileType Source #

Hashable instance of FileType.

Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

Methods

hashWithSalt :: Int -> FileType -> Int #

hash :: FileType -> Int #

type Rep FileType Source # 
Instance details

Defined in Pencil.Internal.Pencil

type Rep FileType = D1 (MetaData "FileType" "Pencil.Internal.Pencil" "pencil-0.1.3-Cp51ZQXMr2m3qzccK2QtDD" False) ((C1 (MetaCons "Html" PrefixI False) (U1 :: Type -> Type) :+: C1 (MetaCons "Markdown" PrefixI False) (U1 :: Type -> Type)) :+: (C1 (MetaCons "Css" PrefixI False) (U1 :: Type -> Type) :+: (C1 (MetaCons "Sass" PrefixI False) (U1 :: Type -> Type) :+: C1 (MetaCons "Other" PrefixI False) (U1 :: Type -> Type))))

fileType :: FilePath -> FileType Source #

Takes a file path and returns the FileType, defaulting to Other if it's not a supported extension.

toExtension :: FileType -> Maybe String Source #

Converts a FileType into its converted webpage extension, if Pencil would convert it (e.g. Markdown to HTML).

>>> toExtension Markdown
Just "html"

asks #

Arguments

:: MonadReader r m 
=> (r -> a)

The selector function to apply to the environment.

-> m a 

Retrieves a function of the current environment.

Error handling

data PencilException Source #

Known Pencil errors that we know how to either recover from or quit gracefully.