NAME
    Filter::Template - a source filter for inline code templates (macros)

VERSION
    version 1.043

SYNOPSIS
            use Filter::Template;

            # use Filter::Template ( isa => 'SomeModule' );

            template max (one,two) {
                    ((one) > (two) ? (one) : (two))
            }

            print {% max $one, $two %}, "\n";

            const PI 3.14159265359

            print "PI\n";         # Constants are expanded inside strings.
            print "HAPPINESS\n";  # Also expanded due to naive parser.

            enum ZERO ONE TWO
            enum 12 TWELVE THIRTEEN FOURTEEN
            enum + FIFTEEN SIXTEEN SEVENTEEN

            # Prints numbers, due to naive parser.
            print "ZERO ONE TWO TWELVE THIRTEEN FOURTEEN FIFTEEN SIXTEEN SEVENTEEN\n";

            if ($expression) {      # include
                     ... lines of code ...
            }                       # include

            unless ($expression) {  # include
                    ... lines of code ...
            } elsif ($expression) { # include
                    ... lines of code ...
            } else {                # include
                    ... lines of code ...
            }                       # include

DESCRIPTION
    Filter::Template is a Perl source filter that provides simple inline
    source code templates. Inlined source code can be significantly faster
    than subroutines, especially for small-scale functions like accessors
    and mutators. On the other hand, they are more difficult to maintain and
    use. Choose your trade-offs wisely.

  Templates
    Code templates are defined with the "template" statement, which looks a
    lot like "sub". Because this is a naive source filter, however, the open
    brace must be on the same line as the "template" keyword. Furthermore,
    the first closing brace in column zero ends a macro body.

            template oops {
                    die "Oops";
            }

    Templates are inserted into a program using a simple syntax that was
    adapted from other template libraries. It was chosen to be compatible
    with the Perl syntax highlighting of common text editors.

    This inserts the body of "template oops".

            {% oops %}

    Templates can have parameters. The syntax for template parameters was
    based on prototypes for Perl subroutines. The two main differences are
    that parameters are named, and sigils are not used.

            template sum_2 (parameter_0, parameter_1) {
                    print( parameter_0 + parameter_1, "\n" );
            }

    To insert a template with parameters, simply list the parameters after
    the template name.

            {% sum_2 $base, $increment %}

    At expansion time, occurrences of the parameter names within the
    template are replaced with the source code provided in the template
    invocation. In the previous example, "sum_2" literally expands to

      print( $base + $increment, "\n" );

    and is then compiled by Perl.

  Constants and Enumerations
    Filter::Template also defines "const" and "enum" keywords. They are
    essentially simplified templates without parameters.

    "const" defines a constant that is replaced before compile time. Unlike
    Perl's native constants, these are not demoted to function calls when
    Perl is run in debugging or profiling mode.

            const CONSTANT_NAME     'constant value'
            const ANOTHER_CONSTANT  23

    Enumerations are like constants but several sequential integers can be
    defined in one statement. Enumerations start from zero by default:

            enum ZEROTH FIRST SECOND

    If the first parameter of an enumeration is a number, then the
    enumerated constants will start with that value:

            enum 10 TENTH ELEVENTH TWELFTH

    Enumerations may not span lines, but they can be continued. If the first
    enumeration parameter is the plus sign, then constants will start where
    the previous enumeration left off.

            enum 13 THIRTEENTH FOURTEENTH  FIFTEENTH
            enum +  SIXTEENTH  SEVENTEENTH EIGHTEENTH

  Conditional Code Inclusion (#ifdef)
    The preprocessor supports something like cpp's #if/#else/#endif by
    usurping a bit of Perl's conditional syntax. The following conditional
    statements will be evaluated at compile time if they are followed by the
    comment "# include":

            if (EXPRESSION) {      # include
                    BLOCK;
            } elsif (EXPRESSION) { # include
                    BLOCK;
            } else {               # include
                    BLOCK;
            }                      # include

            unless (EXPRESSION) {  # include
                    BLOCK;
            }                      # include

    The code in each conditional statement's BLOCK will be included or
    excluded in the compiled code depending on the outcome of its
    EXPRESSION.

    Conditional includes are nestable, but else and elsif must be on the
    same line as the previous block's closing brace, as they are in the
    previous example.

    Filter::Template::UseBytes uses conditional code to define different
    versions of a {% use_bytes %} macro depending whether the "bytes" pragma
    exists.

IMPORTING TEMPLATES
    Filter::Template can import templates defined by another class. For
    example, this invocation imports the "use_bytes" template:

            use Filter::Template ( isa => 'Filter::Template::UseBytes' );

    Imported templates can be redefined in the current namespace.

    Note: If the imported templates require additional Perl modules, any
    code which imports them must also "use" those modules.

DEBUGGING
    Filter::Template has three debugging constants which will only take
    effect if they are defined before the module is first used.

    To trace source filtering in general, and to see the resulting code and
    operations performed on each line, define:

            sub Filter::Template::DEBUG () { 1 }

    To trace template invocations as they happen, define:

            sub Filter::Template::DEBUG_INVOKE () { 1 }

    To see template, constant, and enum definitions, define:

            sub Filter::Template::DEBUG_DEFINE () { 1 }

    To see warnings when a template or constant is redefined, define:

            sub Filter::Template::DEFINE () { 1 }

CAVEATS
    Source filters are line-based, and so is the template language. The only
    constructs that may span lines are template definitions, and those must
    span lines.

    Filter::Template does not parse perl. The regular expressions that
    detect and replace code are simplistic and may not do the right things
    when parsing challenging Perl syntax. Constants are replaced within
    strings, for example.

    The regexp optimizer makes silly subexpressions like /(?:|m)/. That
    could be done better as /m?/ or /(?:jklm)?/ if the literal is longer
    than a single character.

    The regexp optimizer does not optimize (?:x|y|z) as character classes.

    The regexp optimizer is based on code in Ilya Zakharevich's Text::Trie.
    Better regexp optimizers were released afterwards, and Filter::Template
    should use one of them.

LINKS
  BUG TRACKER
    https://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Status=Active&Queue=Filter-Templat
    e

  REPOSITORY
    http://github.com/rcaputo/filter-template
    http://gitorious.org/filter-template

  OTHER RESOURCES
    http://search.cpan.org/dist/Filter-Template/

SEE ALSO
    Text::Trie, PAR, Filter::Template::UseBytes.

AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT
    Filter::Template is Copyright 2000-2013 Rocco Caputo. Some parts are
    Copyright 2001 Matt Cashner. All rights reserved. Filter::Template is
    free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
    terms as Perl itself.

    Filter::Template was previously known as POE::Preprocessor.