Pug template engine for Symfony
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In the root directory of your Symfony project, open a terminal and enter.
composer require pug-php/pug-symfony
When you are asked to install automatically needed settings, enter yes.
It for any reason, you do not can or want to use it, you will have to add to your config/bundles.php file:
Pug\PugSymfonyBundle\PugSymfonyBundle::class => ['all' => true],
Create Pug views by creating files with .pug extension in templates such as contact.pug:
h1
| Contact
=name
Then inject Pug\PugSymfonyEngine
to call it in your controller:
namespace App\Controller;
use Pug\PugSymfonyEngine;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Attribute\AsController;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
#[AsController]
class MyController
{
#[Route('/contact')]
public function contactAction(PugSymfonyEngine $pug)
{
return $pug->renderResponse('contact/contact.pug', [
'name' => 'Us',
]);
}
}
Or alternatively you can use \Pug\Symfony\Traits\PugRenderer
to call directly ->render()
from
any method of a controller (or service):
namespace App\Controller;
use Pug\Symfony\Traits\PugRenderer;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Attribute\AsController;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
#[AsController]
class MyController
{
use PugRenderer;
#[Route('/contact')]
public function contactAction()
{
return $this->render('contact/contact.pug', [
'name' => 'Us',
]);
}
}
No matter if your controller extends AbstractController
as it can also render twig views, so it will just
work the same as before rather you ->render('view.html.twig')
or ->render('view.pug')
.
Note: standard Twig functions are also available in your pug templates, for instance:
!=form(form)
As per https://symfony.com/doc/current/forms.html
Pass the FormView as usual from the controller:
$task = new Task();
// ...
$form = $this->createFormBuilder($task)
// ...
->getForm();
return $pug->renderResponse('home.pug', [
'form' => $form->createView(),
]);
You can inject Pug\PugSymfonyEngine
to change options, share values, add plugins to Pug
at route level:
// In a controller method
#[Route('/contact')]
public function contactAction(\Pug\PugSymfonyEngine $pug)
{
$pug->setOptions(array(
'pretty' => true,
'pugjs' => true,
// ...
));
$pug->share('globalVar', 'foo');
$pug->getRenderer()->addKeyword('customKeyword', $bar);
return $pug->renderResponse('contact/contact.pug', [
'name' => 'Us',
]);
}
If you use the PugRenderer
trait, you don't need to inject the service again and can just use $this->pug
.
Same can be run globally on a given event such as onKernelView
to apply customization before any
view rendering.
See the options in the pug-php documentation: https://phug-lang.com/#options
Initial options can also be passed in parameters in your config/services.yaml:
# config/services.yaml
parameters:
# ...
pug:
expressionLanguage: php
Note: you can also create a config/packages/pug.yaml to store the Pug settings.
Globals of Twig are available in Pug views (such as the app
variable to get app.token
or app.environment
)
and any custom global value or service you will add to twig.yaml:
# config/packages/twig.yaml
twig:
# ...
globals:
translator: '@translator'
Make the translator available in every view:
p=translator.trans('Hello %name%', {'%name%': 'Jack'})
Keys (left) passed to globals
are the variable name to be used in the view, values (right) are
the class name (can be '@\App\MyService'
) or the alias to resolve the dependency injection. It
can also be static values such as ga_tracking: 'UA-xxxxx-x'
.
If you need more advanced customizations to be applied for every Pug rendering, you can use interceptor services.
# config/services.yaml
parameters:
# ...
pug:
interceptors:
- App\Service\PugInterceptor
# You can add more interceptors
services:
# ...
# They all need to be public
App\Service\PugInterceptor:
public: true
Then the interceptor would look like this:
// src/Service/PugInterceptor.php
namespace App\Service;
use Pug\Symfony\Contracts\InterceptorInterface;
use Pug\Symfony\RenderEvent;
use Symfony\Contracts\EventDispatcher\Event;
class PugInterceptor implements InterceptorInterface
{
public function intercept(Event $event)
{
if ($event instanceof RenderEvent) {
// Here you can any method on the engine or the renderer:
$event->getEngine()->getRenderer()->addKeyword('customKeyword', $bar);
$event->getEngine()->getRenderer()->addExtension(MyPlugin::class);
// Or/and manipulate the local variables passed to the view:
$locals = $event->getLocals();
$locals['foo']++;
$event->setLocals($locals);
// Or/and get set the name of the view that is about to be rendered:
if ($event->getName() === 'profile.pug') {
// if user variable is missing
if (!isset($event->getLocals()['user'])) {
$event->setName('search-user.pug');
// Render the search-user.pug instead of profile.pug
}
}
}
}
}
As services, interceptors can inject any dependency in their constructor to
use it in the intercept
method:
class PugInterceptor implements InterceptorInterface
{
private $service;
public function __construct(MyOtherService $service)
{
$this->service = $service;
}
public function intercept(Event $event)
{
if ($event instanceof RenderEvent) {
$event->getEngine()->share('anwser', $this->service->getAnwser());
}
}
}
And interceptors are lazy-loaded, it means in the example above, neither PugInterceptor
nor MyOtherService
will be loaded if they are not used elsewhere and if the current request
does not end with a pug rendering (pure-Twig view, API response, websocket, etc.) so it's a
good way to optimize things you only need to do before pug rendering.
In production, you better have to pre-render all your templates to improve performances using the command below:
php bin/console assets:publish --env=prod
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