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1.7 KiB
25 lines
1.7 KiB
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Provide custom templates using the API
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This file is included in the user-manual document
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Asciidoctor allows you to override the converter methods used to convert almost any individual AsciiDoc element.
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If you provide a directory of {uri-tilt}[Tilt]-compatible templates, named in such a way that Asciidoctor can figure out which template goes with which element, Asciidoctor will use the templates in this directory instead of its built-in templates for any elements for which it finds a matching template.
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It will fallback to its default templates for everything else.
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[source,ruby]
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----
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puts Asciidoctor.convert '*This* is Asciidoctor.', :header_footer => true,
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:template_dir => 'templates'
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----
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The Document and Section templates should begin with `document` and `section`, respectively.
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The file extension is used by Tilt to determine which view framework it will use to use to interpret the template.
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For instance, if you want to write the template in ERB, you'd name these two templates `document.html.erb` and `section.html.erb`.
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The first file extension, `.html`, maps to the converter and the second, `.erb` maps to the template engine.
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To use Haml as the template engine, you'd name the templates `document.html.haml` and `section.html.haml`.
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Templates for block elements, like a paragraph or sidebar, are named after the block they handle.
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For instance, to override the default paragraph template with an ERB template, put a file named `paragraph.html.erb` in the template directory you pass to the `Document` constructor using the `:template_dir` option.
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For more usage examples, see the {backend-git}[asciidoctor-backends], the O'Reilly {uri-asciidoctor-htmlbook}[htmlbook] project and the (massive) {tests}[test suite].
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