Skip to content

Theo is a small and elegant HTML-like template language for Ruby on Rails, featuring natural partials and computed attributes.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

loomchild/theo-rails

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

71 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Gem Version

Theo

Theo is a small and elegant HTML-like template language for Ruby on Rails, featuring natural partials and computed attributes.

Warning

Please note that this software is still experimental - use at your own risk.

Introduction

Thanks to Hotwire, it's now possible to build sophisticated server-rendered user interfaces in Ruby on Rails. However, ERB, Rails' most popular template language, has unintuitive partial syntax, especially for those used to working with Vue.js or React components.

With Theo, you can render a partial using HTML-like syntax:

<Button size="large" label%="label" />

Getting started

Install

Run

bundle add theo-rails

Configure

If you are using TailwindCSS, add .theo extension to the content key in your tailwind.config.js:

'./app/views/**/*.{erb,haml,html,slim,theo}'

Try

Create a new view named 'hello.html.theo(note the.theo` suffix), with the following content:

<span style%="'background-color: ' + 'yellow'">Hello from Theo!</span>

Visit the URL corresponding to this view and you should see a highlighed text.

Syntax

Computed attributes

Computing attribute value in ERB feels awkward because angle brackets <> clash with the surrounding HTML tag.

In Theo, an attribute with computed value can be expressed using %=. For example:

<a href%="root_path">Home</a>

is equivalent to:

<a href="<%= root_path %>">Home</a>

Tip

Computed attributes work with partials as well as standard HTML tags.

Short form

If value of a dynamic attribute is the same as its name, you can omit the value.

For example

<div style%>Text</div>

is equivalent to:

<div style%="style">Text</div>

which in turn is equivalent to:

<div style="<%= style %>">Text</div>

Since class is a Ruby keyword, it's treated specially:

<div class%>Text</div>

is equivalent to:

<div class="<%= binding.local_variable_get('class') %>">Text</div>

Tip

Short form is especially useful when you want to apply a class and style attribute to a partial root.

Partials

Rendering a partial in ERB requires switching between HTML markup and Ruby code, and the render verb makes it difficult to imagine a page as a component structure.

In Theo, you render a partial by writing a tag using PascalCase, for example:

<Button size="large" />

is equivalent to:

<%= render 'button', size: 'large' %>

Naturally, partials can also include content, e.g.:

<Button size="large">
  Create
</Button>

Tip

Rendered partials can be implemented in ERB, Theo or any other template language.

Collections

You can render a collection of partials as follows:

<Widget collection="widgets" />

which is equivalent to:

<%= render partial: 'widget', collection: widgets %>

You can also customize the local variable name via the as attribute, e.g.:

<Widget collection="widgets" as="item" />

Boolean attributes

If an attribute has no value, you can omit it, for example:

<Button disabled />

is equivalent to:

<Button disabled="" />

Path

To render a partial from another folder, use the 'path' attribute, e.g.:

<Widget path="widgets" />

is equivalent to:

<%= render 'widgets/widget' %>

yields attribute

Partials can yield a value, such as a builder object that can be used by child partials. For example:

<WidgetBuilder yields="widget">
  <WidgetElement widget%="widget" />
</WidgetBuilder>

is equivalent to:

<%= render 'widget_builder' do |widget| %>
  <%= render 'widget_element', widget: %>
<% end %>

provide and inject helpers

Instead of using yields attribute, a parent partial can indirectly pass a variable to its children using the provide and inject helpers. The example above can be modified as follows:

<WidgetBuilder>
  <WidgetElement />
</WidgetBuilder>

_widget_builder.html.theo:

<% provide(widget:) do %>
  <%= yield %>
<% end %>

_widget_element.html.theo:

<% widget = inject(:widget) %>

Note

This technique is used by form partials. Use it sparingly, as implicit variables can reduce code readability.

ERB backwards compatibility

You can freely mix ERB and Theo syntax, e.g.:

<% if total_amount > 100 %>
  <FreeShipping amount%="total_amount" />
<% end %>

Forms

You can build a <form> element in ERB using ActionView form helpers. Theo provides corresponding partials. For example:

<FormWith model%="widget" data-turbo-confirm="Are you sure?">
  <div>
    <Label name="name" />
    <TextField name="name" />
  </div>

  <div>
    <Label name="size" />
    <Select name="size" options%="['Big', 'Small']" />
  </div>

  <Submit value="Create" />
</FormWith>

is equivalent to:

<%= form_with model: widget, data: { turbo_confirm: 'Are you sure?' } do |form| %>
  <div>
    <%= form.label :name %>
    <%= form.text_field :name %>
  </div>

  <div>
    <%= form.label :size %>
    <%= form.select :size, ['Big', 'Small'] %>
  </div>

  <%= form.submit "Create" %>
<% end %>

ViewComponents

Theo is compatible with ViewComponent framework.

Here's a component using Theo template syntax:

class ButtonComponent < ViewComponent::Base
  theo_template <<-THEO
    <span class%="@size"><%= content %></span>
  THEO

  def initialize(size:)
    @size = size
  end
end

If a components exists, Theo automatically renders it instead of a partial. Therefore:

<Button size="large" />

is equivalent to:

<%= render(ButtonComponent.new(size: "large")) %>

Components can yield a value:

<Button size="large" yields="component">
  <% component.with_header do %>Icon<% end %>
  Create
</Button>

You can also render a component collection as follows:

<Widget collection="widgets" />

which is equivalent to:

<%= render WidgetComponent.with_collection(widgets) %>

About

Theo is a small and elegant HTML-like template language for Ruby on Rails, featuring natural partials and computed attributes.

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published