Name

    Web::Components::Role::TT - Applies Template as Web::Component role

Synopsis

       use Moo;
    
       with 'Web::Components::Role';
       with 'Web::Components::Role::TT';
    
       $rendered_template = $self->render_template( $stash );

Description

    Uses Template to render templates, typically producing a page of HTML.
    It is meant to be used in conjunction with Web::Components and
    Web::ComposableRequest as it's API assumes these are used

    Templates are assumed to be encoded as utf8

Configuration and Environment

    Defines the following attributes;

    templates

      A lazily evaluated directory which defaults to templates in the
      configuration root directory. This is where the templates are stored

Subroutines/Methods

 render_template

       $rendered_template = $self->render_template( $stash );

    The $stash hash reference may contain a config attribute, otherwise the
    invocant is expected to provide a config object. The $stash should also
    contain skin and page attributes. The page hash reference should
    contain a layout attribute

    The path to the template file is templates/<skin>/<layout>.tt. The skin
    and layout attributes default to the values of the configuration object

Diagnostics

    The compiled templates are stored in subdirectories below the
    configuration temporary directory

Dependencies

    Class::Usul

    File::DataClass

    Moo

    Template

    Unexpected

Incompatibilities

    There are no known incompatibilities in this module

Bugs and Limitations

    There are no known bugs in this module. Please report problems to
    http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Web-Components-Role-TT.
    Patches are welcome

Acknowledgements

    Larry Wall - For the Perl programming language

Author

    Peter Flanigan, <pjfl@cpan.org>

License and Copyright

    Copyright (c) 2015 Peter Flanigan. All rights reserved

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic

    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
    WITHOUT WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
    or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE

