Defining functions
The templates use the string representation of an object to insert values, using the fmt
package to convert the object to a string. Sometimes this isn't what is needed. For example, to avoid spammers getting hold of email addresses it is quite common to see the symbol '@'
replaced by the word " at "
, as in "jan at newmarch.name"
. If we want to use a template to display email addresses in that form, then we have to build a custom function to do this transformation.
Each template function has a name that is used in the templates themselves, and an associated Go function. These are linked by the type
type FuncMap map[string]interface{}
For example, if we want our template function to be "emailExpand"
which is linked to the Go function EmailExpander
then we add this to the functions in a template by
t = t.Funcs(template.FuncMap{"emailExpand": EmailExpander})
The signature for EmailExpander
is typically
func EmailExpander(args ...interface{}) string
In the use we are interested in, there should only be one argument to the function which will be a string. Existing functions in the Go template library have some initial code to handle non-conforming cases, so we just copy that. Then it is just simple string manipulation to change the format of the email address. A program is
/**
* PrintEmails
*/
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"strings"
"text/template"
)
type Person struct {
Name string
Emails []string
}
const templ = `The name is {{.Name}}.
{{range .Emails}}
An email is "{{. | emailExpand}}"
{{end}}
`
func EmailExpander(args ...interface{}) string {
ok := false
var s string
if len(args) == 1 {
s, ok = args[0].(string)
}
if !ok {
s = fmt.Sprint(args...)
}
// find the @ symbol
substrs := strings.Split(s, "@")
if len(substrs) != 2 {
return s
}
// replace the @ by " at "
return (substrs[0] + " at " + substrs[1])
}
func main() {
person := Person{
Name: "jan",
Emails: []string{"[email protected]", "[email protected]"},
}
t := template.New("Person template")
// add our function
t = t.Funcs(template.FuncMap{"emailExpand": EmailExpander})
t, err := t.Parse(templ)
checkError(err)
err = t.Execute(os.Stdout, person)
checkError(err)
}
func checkError(err error) {
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("Fatal error ", err.Error())
os.Exit(1)
}
}
The output is
The name is jan.
An email is "jan at newmarch.name"
An email is "jan.newmarch at gmail.com"