table of contents
- bookworm 1:3.1
- testing 1:3.1+nmu1
- unstable 1:3.1+nmu1
- experimental 1:3.1+support3.3~0
ERB(1)() | (ruby programmers reference guide) | ERB(1)() |
NAME¶
erb
— Ruby
Templating
SYNOPSIS¶
erb |
[--version ] [-UPdnvx ]
[-E ext[:int]]
[-S level]
[-T mode]
[-r library]
[-- ] [file ...] |
DESCRIPTION¶
erb
is a command line front-end for
ERB
library, which is an implementation of
eRuby.
ERB provides an easy to use but powerful templating system for Ruby. Using ERB, actual Ruby code can be added to any plain text document for the purposes of generating document information details and/or flow control.
erb
is a part of
Ruby
.
OPTIONS¶
--version
- Prints the version of
erb
. -E
external[:internal]--encoding
external[:internal]- Specifies the default value(s) for external encodings and internal
encoding. Values should be separated with colon (:).
You can omit the one for internal encodings, then the value (
Encoding.default_internal
)will be nil.
-P
- Evaluates lines starting with
%
as Ruby code and removes the tailing EOLs. -S
level- Specifies the safe level in which eRuby script will run.
-T
mode- Specifies trim mode (default 0). mode can be one of
-U
- can be one of Sets the default value for internal encodings
(
Encoding.default_internal
)to UTF-8.
-d
--debug
- Turns on debug mode.
$DEBUG
will be set to true. -h
--help
- Prints a summary of the options.
-n
- Used with
-x
. Prepends the line number to each line in the output. -v
- Enables verbose mode.
$VERBOSE
will be set to true. -x
- Converts the eRuby script into Ruby script and prints it without line numbers.
EXAMPLES¶
Here is an eRuby script
<?xml version="1.0" ?> <% require 'prime' -%> <erb-example> <calc><%= 1+1 %></calc> <var><%= __FILE__ %></var> <library><%= Prime.each(10).to_a.join(", ") %></library> </erb-example>
Command
% erb -T - example.erb
<?xml version="1.0" ?> <erb-example> <calc>2</calc> <var>example.erb</var> <library>2, 3, 5, 7</library> </erb-example>
SEE ALSO¶
And see ri(1) documentation for
ERB
class.
REPORTING BUGS¶
Security vulnerabilities should be reported via
an email to
⟨security@ruby-lang.org⟩. Reported problems
will be published after being fixed.
And you can report other bugs and feature
requests via the
Ruby Issue Tracking System
(http://bugs.ruby-lang.org). Do not report security vulnerabilities via the
system because it publishes the vulnerabilities immediately.
AUTHORS¶
Written by Masatoshi SEKI.
November 15, 2012 | UNIX |