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Text::Xslate::Manual::Debugging(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Text::Xslate::Manual::Debugging(3pm)

NAME

Text::Xslate::Manual::Debugging - Debugging techniques for Xslate templates

DESCRIPTION

This document describes techniques for debugging templates.

Setting "verbose => 2"

Try "verbose => 2" in the first step. This option enables full warnings, especially warnings related to "undef".

File names and line numbers

Xslate messages include file names, line numbers, and, if possible, source code lines which seems problems.

You can also access the file name and the line number in templates by "__FILE__" and "__LINE__" tokens just like as Perl.

If you want reports files and lines from your registered functions, "Text::Xslate->current_file" and "Text::Xslate->current_line" in callbacks are the same as "__FILE__" and "__LINE__" in templates respectively.

    sub my_sqrt {
        my($n) = @_;
        if($n < 1) {
            # return a message instead of warnings
            return sprintf "!!! Can't take sqrt of $n at %s line %d !!!",
                Text::Xslate->current_file, Text::Xslate->current_line;
        }
        return sqrt($n);
    }
    my $tx = Text::Xslate->new(
        function => { sqrt => \&my_sqrt },
    );

To dump values

You can use any dumping modules via the "function" option, but Xslate has a builtin "dump" filter to dump template values.

    <: $value | dump # Dump $value with Data::Dumper :>

Detection of missing variables (or typos or variable names)

Xslate itself has warning system for use of uninitialized values, but sometimes it is not enough.

If you want fill in some string, e.g. FILL ME, for missing variables, you can use the hash_with_default() utility. For example:

    use Text::Xslate::Util qw(hash_with_default);
    $tx->render($name, hash_with_default(\%vars, sub { "FILL ME '@_' " }) );

Note that this is really slow because it is a tied-hash wrapper.

Customization of error messages

You can customize error handlers by "warn_handler" and "die_handler". In these handlers, you can call "Text::Xslate->print()" method in order to add your custom messages to the output buffer, which makes debugging easier.

    #!perl -w
    use strict;
    use Text::Xslate;
    my %vpath = (
        hello => 'Hello, <: $lang :> world!' . "\n",
    );
    my $tx = Text::Xslate->new(
        path         => \%vpath,
        verbose      => 2,
        warn_handler => sub { Text::Xslate->print('[[', @_, ']]') },
    );
    print $tx->render('hello', { });
    # => Hello, [[use nil to print at ...]] world!

SEE ALSO

Text::Xslate

Text::Xslate::Manual

2024-03-07 perl v5.38.2