From c8013d4982c46e09b09a083b72baee2f5c0d77b0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Christopher Speller Date: Wed, 1 Aug 2018 15:38:56 -0700 Subject: Remove accidential dependency (#9203) --- vendor/github.com/alecthomas/template/doc.go | 406 --------------------------- 1 file changed, 406 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 vendor/github.com/alecthomas/template/doc.go (limited to 'vendor/github.com/alecthomas/template/doc.go') diff --git a/vendor/github.com/alecthomas/template/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/alecthomas/template/doc.go deleted file mode 100644 index 223c595c2..000000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/alecthomas/template/doc.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,406 +0,0 @@ -// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. -// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style -// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. - -/* -Package template implements data-driven templates for generating textual output. - -To generate HTML output, see package html/template, which has the same interface -as this package but automatically secures HTML output against certain attacks. - -Templates are executed by applying them to a data structure. Annotations in the -template refer to elements of the data structure (typically a field of a struct -or a key in a map) to control execution and derive values to be displayed. -Execution of the template walks the structure and sets the cursor, represented -by a period '.' and called "dot", to the value at the current location in the -structure as execution proceeds. - -The input text for a template is UTF-8-encoded text in any format. -"Actions"--data evaluations or control structures--are delimited by -"{{" and "}}"; all text outside actions is copied to the output unchanged. -Actions may not span newlines, although comments can. - -Once parsed, a template may be executed safely in parallel. - -Here is a trivial example that prints "17 items are made of wool". - - type Inventory struct { - Material string - Count uint - } - sweaters := Inventory{"wool", 17} - tmpl, err := template.New("test").Parse("{{.Count}} items are made of {{.Material}}") - if err != nil { panic(err) } - err = tmpl.Execute(os.Stdout, sweaters) - if err != nil { panic(err) } - -More intricate examples appear below. - -Actions - -Here is the list of actions. "Arguments" and "pipelines" are evaluations of -data, defined in detail below. - -*/ -// {{/* a comment */}} -// A comment; discarded. May contain newlines. -// Comments do not nest and must start and end at the -// delimiters, as shown here. -/* - - {{pipeline}} - The default textual representation of the value of the pipeline - is copied to the output. - - {{if pipeline}} T1 {{end}} - If the value of the pipeline is empty, no output is generated; - otherwise, T1 is executed. The empty values are false, 0, any - nil pointer or interface value, and any array, slice, map, or - string of length zero. - Dot is unaffected. - - {{if pipeline}} T1 {{else}} T0 {{end}} - If the value of the pipeline is empty, T0 is executed; - otherwise, T1 is executed. Dot is unaffected. - - {{if pipeline}} T1 {{else if pipeline}} T0 {{end}} - To simplify the appearance of if-else chains, the else action - of an if may include another if directly; the effect is exactly - the same as writing - {{if pipeline}} T1 {{else}}{{if pipeline}} T0 {{end}}{{end}} - - {{range pipeline}} T1 {{end}} - The value of the pipeline must be an array, slice, map, or channel. - If the value of the pipeline has length zero, nothing is output; - otherwise, dot is set to the successive elements of the array, - slice, or map and T1 is executed. If the value is a map and the - keys are of basic type with a defined order ("comparable"), the - elements will be visited in sorted key order. - - {{range pipeline}} T1 {{else}} T0 {{end}} - The value of the pipeline must be an array, slice, map, or channel. - If the value of the pipeline has length zero, dot is unaffected and - T0 is executed; otherwise, dot is set to the successive elements - of the array, slice, or map and T1 is executed. - - {{template "name"}} - The template with the specified name is executed with nil data. - - {{template "name" pipeline}} - The template with the specified name is executed with dot set - to the value of the pipeline. - - {{with pipeline}} T1 {{end}} - If the value of the pipeline is empty, no output is generated; - otherwise, dot is set to the value of the pipeline and T1 is - executed. - - {{with pipeline}} T1 {{else}} T0 {{end}} - If the value of the pipeline is empty, dot is unaffected and T0 - is executed; otherwise, dot is set to the value of the pipeline - and T1 is executed. - -Arguments - -An argument is a simple value, denoted by one of the following. - - - A boolean, string, character, integer, floating-point, imaginary - or complex constant in Go syntax. These behave like Go's untyped - constants, although raw strings may not span newlines. - - The keyword nil, representing an untyped Go nil. - - The character '.' (period): - . - The result is the value of dot. - - A variable name, which is a (possibly empty) alphanumeric string - preceded by a dollar sign, such as - $piOver2 - or - $ - The result is the value of the variable. - Variables are described below. - - The name of a field of the data, which must be a struct, preceded - by a period, such as - .Field - The result is the value of the field. Field invocations may be - chained: - .Field1.Field2 - Fields can also be evaluated on variables, including chaining: - $x.Field1.Field2 - - The name of a key of the data, which must be a map, preceded - by a period, such as - .Key - The result is the map element value indexed by the key. - Key invocations may be chained and combined with fields to any - depth: - .Field1.Key1.Field2.Key2 - Although the key must be an alphanumeric identifier, unlike with - field names they do not need to start with an upper case letter. - Keys can also be evaluated on variables, including chaining: - $x.key1.key2 - - The name of a niladic method of the data, preceded by a period, - such as - .Method - The result is the value of invoking the method with dot as the - receiver, dot.Method(). Such a method must have one return value (of - any type) or two return values, the second of which is an error. - If it has two and the returned error is non-nil, execution terminates - and an error is returned to the caller as the value of Execute. - Method invocations may be chained and combined with fields and keys - to any depth: - .Field1.Key1.Method1.Field2.Key2.Method2 - Methods can also be evaluated on variables, including chaining: - $x.Method1.Field - - The name of a niladic function, such as - fun - The result is the value of invoking the function, fun(). The return - types and values behave as in methods. Functions and function - names are described below. - - A parenthesized instance of one the above, for grouping. The result - may be accessed by a field or map key invocation. - print (.F1 arg1) (.F2 arg2) - (.StructValuedMethod "arg").Field - -Arguments may evaluate to any type; if they are pointers the implementation -automatically indirects to the base type when required. -If an evaluation yields a function value, such as a function-valued -field of a struct, the function is not invoked automatically, but it -can be used as a truth value for an if action and the like. To invoke -it, use the call function, defined below. - -A pipeline is a possibly chained sequence of "commands". A command is a simple -value (argument) or a function or method call, possibly with multiple arguments: - - Argument - The result is the value of evaluating the argument. - .Method [Argument...] - The method can be alone or the last element of a chain but, - unlike methods in the middle of a chain, it can take arguments. - The result is the value of calling the method with the - arguments: - dot.Method(Argument1, etc.) - functionName [Argument...] - The result is the value of calling the function associated - with the name: - function(Argument1, etc.) - Functions and function names are described below. - -Pipelines - -A pipeline may be "chained" by separating a sequence of commands with pipeline -characters '|'. In a chained pipeline, the result of the each command is -passed as the last argument of the following command. The output of the final -command in the pipeline is the value of the pipeline. - -The output of a command will be either one value or two values, the second of -which has type error. If that second value is present and evaluates to -non-nil, execution terminates and the error is returned to the caller of -Execute. - -Variables - -A pipeline inside an action may initialize a variable to capture the result. -The initialization has syntax - - $variable := pipeline - -where $variable is the name of the variable. An action that declares a -variable produces no output. - -If a "range" action initializes a variable, the variable is set to the -successive elements of the iteration. Also, a "range" may declare two -variables, separated by a comma: - - range $index, $element := pipeline - -in which case $index and $element are set to the successive values of the -array/slice index or map key and element, respectively. Note that if there is -only one variable, it is assigned the element; this is opposite to the -convention in Go range clauses. - -A variable's scope extends to the "end" action of the control structure ("if", -"with", or "range") in which it is declared, or to the end of the template if -there is no such control structure. A template invocation does not inherit -variables from the point of its invocation. - -When execution begins, $ is set to the data argument passed to Execute, that is, -to the starting value of dot. - -Examples - -Here are some example one-line templates demonstrating pipelines and variables. -All produce the quoted word "output": - - {{"\"output\""}} - A string constant. - {{`"output"`}} - A raw string constant. - {{printf "%q" "output"}} - A function call. - {{"output" | printf "%q"}} - A function call whose final argument comes from the previous - command. - {{printf "%q" (print "out" "put")}} - A parenthesized argument. - {{"put" | printf "%s%s" "out" | printf "%q"}} - A more elaborate call. - {{"output" | printf "%s" | printf "%q"}} - A longer chain. - {{with "output"}}{{printf "%q" .}}{{end}} - A with action using dot. - {{with $x := "output" | printf "%q"}}{{$x}}{{end}} - A with action that creates and uses a variable. - {{with $x := "output"}}{{printf "%q" $x}}{{end}} - A with action that uses the variable in another action. - {{with $x := "output"}}{{$x | printf "%q"}}{{end}} - The same, but pipelined. - -Functions - -During execution functions are found in two function maps: first in the -template, then in the global function map. By default, no functions are defined -in the template but the Funcs method can be used to add them. - -Predefined global functions are named as follows. - - and - Returns the boolean AND of its arguments by returning the - first empty argument or the last argument, that is, - "and x y" behaves as "if x then y else x". All the - arguments are evaluated. - call - Returns the result of calling the first argument, which - must be a function, with the remaining arguments as parameters. - Thus "call .X.Y 1 2" is, in Go notation, dot.X.Y(1, 2) where - Y is a func-valued field, map entry, or the like. - The first argument must be the result of an evaluation - that yields a value of function type (as distinct from - a predefined function such as print). The function must - return either one or two result values, the second of which - is of type error. If the arguments don't match the function - or the returned error value is non-nil, execution stops. - html - Returns the escaped HTML equivalent of the textual - representation of its arguments. - index - Returns the result of indexing its first argument by the - following arguments. Thus "index x 1 2 3" is, in Go syntax, - x[1][2][3]. Each indexed item must be a map, slice, or array. - js - Returns the escaped JavaScript equivalent of the textual - representation of its arguments. - len - Returns the integer length of its argument. - not - Returns the boolean negation of its single argument. - or - Returns the boolean OR of its arguments by returning the - first non-empty argument or the last argument, that is, - "or x y" behaves as "if x then x else y". All the - arguments are evaluated. - print - An alias for fmt.Sprint - printf - An alias for fmt.Sprintf - println - An alias for fmt.Sprintln - urlquery - Returns the escaped value of the textual representation of - its arguments in a form suitable for embedding in a URL query. - -The boolean functions take any zero value to be false and a non-zero -value to be true. - -There is also a set of binary comparison operators defined as -functions: - - eq - Returns the boolean truth of arg1 == arg2 - ne - Returns the boolean truth of arg1 != arg2 - lt - Returns the boolean truth of arg1 < arg2 - le - Returns the boolean truth of arg1 <= arg2 - gt - Returns the boolean truth of arg1 > arg2 - ge - Returns the boolean truth of arg1 >= arg2 - -For simpler multi-way equality tests, eq (only) accepts two or more -arguments and compares the second and subsequent to the first, -returning in effect - - arg1==arg2 || arg1==arg3 || arg1==arg4 ... - -(Unlike with || in Go, however, eq is a function call and all the -arguments will be evaluated.) - -The comparison functions work on basic types only (or named basic -types, such as "type Celsius float32"). They implement the Go rules -for comparison of values, except that size and exact type are -ignored, so any integer value, signed or unsigned, may be compared -with any other integer value. (The arithmetic value is compared, -not the bit pattern, so all negative integers are less than all -unsigned integers.) However, as usual, one may not compare an int -with a float32 and so on. - -Associated templates - -Each template is named by a string specified when it is created. Also, each -template is associated with zero or more other templates that it may invoke by -name; such associations are transitive and form a name space of templates. - -A template may use a template invocation to instantiate another associated -template; see the explanation of the "template" action above. The name must be -that of a template associated with the template that contains the invocation. - -Nested template definitions - -When parsing a template, another template may be defined and associated with the -template being parsed. Template definitions must appear at the top level of the -template, much like global variables in a Go program. - -The syntax of such definitions is to surround each template declaration with a -"define" and "end" action. - -The define action names the template being created by providing a string -constant. Here is a simple example: - - `{{define "T1"}}ONE{{end}} - {{define "T2"}}TWO{{end}} - {{define "T3"}}{{template "T1"}} {{template "T2"}}{{end}} - {{template "T3"}}` - -This defines two templates, T1 and T2, and a third T3 that invokes the other two -when it is executed. Finally it invokes T3. If executed this template will -produce the text - - ONE TWO - -By construction, a template may reside in only one association. If it's -necessary to have a template addressable from multiple associations, the -template definition must be parsed multiple times to create distinct *Template -values, or must be copied with the Clone or AddParseTree method. - -Parse may be called multiple times to assemble the various associated templates; -see the ParseFiles and ParseGlob functions and methods for simple ways to parse -related templates stored in files. - -A template may be executed directly or through ExecuteTemplate, which executes -an associated template identified by name. To invoke our example above, we -might write, - - err := tmpl.Execute(os.Stdout, "no data needed") - if err != nil { - log.Fatalf("execution failed: %s", err) - } - -or to invoke a particular template explicitly by name, - - err := tmpl.ExecuteTemplate(os.Stdout, "T2", "no data needed") - if err != nil { - log.Fatalf("execution failed: %s", err) - } - -*/ -package template -- cgit v1.2.3-1-g7c22