diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 1770ca5..0c2a864 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -88,10 +88,9 @@ Example: } String tmpl = "{{#persons}}{{name}}: {{age}}{{/persons}}\n"; - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().compile(tmpl).execute(new Object() { Object persons = Arrays.asList(new Person("Elvis", 75), new Person("Madonna", 52)); - }; - Mustache.compiler().compile(tmpl).execute(ctx, new OutputStreamWriter(System.out))); + }); // result: // Elvis: 75 @@ -125,10 +124,9 @@ Not escaping HTML by default You can change the default HTML escaping behavior when obtaining a compiler: - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().escapeHTML(false).compile("{{foo}}").execute(new Object() { String foo = ""; - }; - Mustache.compiler().escapeHTML(false).compile("{{foo}}").execute(ctx); + }); // result: // not: <bar> @@ -141,10 +139,9 @@ instead of one of its members. This is particularly useful when iterating over lists. Mustache.compiler().compile("{{this}}").execute("hello"); // returns: hello - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().compile("{{#names}}{{this}}{/names}}").execute(new Object() { List names () { return Arrays.asList("Tom", "Dick", "Harry"); } - }; - Mustache.compiler().compile("{{#names}}{{this}}{/names}}").execute(ctx); + }); // result: TomDickHarry ### -first and -last @@ -159,10 +156,9 @@ One will often make use of these special variables in an inverted section, as follows: String tmpl = "{{#things}}{{^-first}}, {{/-first}}{{self}}{{/things}}"; - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().compile(tmpl).execute(new Object() { List things = Arrays.asList("one", "two", "three"); - }; - Mustache.compiler().compile(tmpl).execute(ctx); + }); // result: one, two, three Note that the values of `-first` and `-last` refer only to the inner-most @@ -177,10 +173,9 @@ other times. Note that it also contains 0 for a section that is populated by a singleton value rather than a list. String tmpl = "My favorite things:\n{{#things}}{{-index}}. {{self}}\n{{/things}}"; - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().compile(tmpl).execute(new Object() { List things = Arrays.asList("Peanut butter", "Pen spinning", "Handstands"); - }; - Mustache.compiler().compile(tmpl).execute(ctx); + }); // result: // My favorite things: // 1. Peanut butter @@ -194,12 +189,11 @@ In addition to resolving simple variables using the context, you can use compound variables to extract data from sub-objects of the current context. For example: - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().compile("Hello {{field.who}}!").execute(new Object() { public Object field = new Object() { public String who () { return "world"; } } - }; - Mustache.compiler().compile("Hello {{field.who}}!").execute(ctx); + }); // result: Hello world! By taking advantage of reflection and bean-property-style lookups, you can do kooky things: @@ -244,11 +238,10 @@ If a variable is not found in a nested context, it is resolved in the next outer context. This allows usage like the following: String template = "{{outer}}:\n{{#inner}}{{outer}}.{{this}}\n{{/inner}}"; - Object ctx = new Object() { + Mustache.compiler().compile(template).execute(new Object() { String outer = "foo"; List inner = Arrays.asList("bar", "baz", "bif"); - }; - Mustache.compiler().compile(template).execute(ctx); + }); // results: // foo: // foo.bar