Natural and extensible interface markup for the web.
Prim is a new and extremely fast templating language that implements only the most intuitive and natural concepts of interface structure, allowing for developers to efficiently create platform-agnostic user interfaces.
Bearing a simple syntax and leaving out specific rules like img tags are self-closing
, Prim achieves maximum performance and readability. The simple, unopinionated design of Prim allows for a healthy balance between recyclability and output transparency.
Prim is great for creating web applications. The parser returns a plain HTML string that can be treated as a reusable atomic DOM node. It plays well with client-side MVC frameworks such as AngularJS and Backbone, and servers like Express (Node.js).
Prim may be implemented in the future as an interface language for software beyond web applications.
To use as a module on your server:
npm install --save primjs
To use the client runtime, download the latest build from git HEAD.
In your HTML, link to your Prim runtime:
<script src="/js/prim.js"></script>
Now you can convert Prim to HTML:
prim.parse('div(class="article") { p |Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet| }');
// '<div class="article"><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p></div>'
You can also define a Prim template in your head:
<script id='primbody' type='text/x-prim'>
div(class='container-fluid') {
br/
div(class='panel panel-default') {
div(class='panel-heading') |Prim|
div(class='panel-body') |Natural, fat free, and extensible interface markup for the web.|
div(class='panel-footer') {
a(href='https://github.com/edge/prim') |Get it now|
}
}
}
</script>
And grab the text to use as a template:
body.append(prim.parse($('#primbody').text()));
Congratulations! You've made your first page in Prim.
npm install --save primjs
var prim = require('primjs');
prim.parse('div(class="article") { p |Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet| }');
// '<div class="article"><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p></div>'
Prim is whitespace-agnostic.
identifier
creates an HTML element with identifier
as tag name
div
<div></div>
identifier/
creates a self closing HTML element with identifier
as tag name
img/
<img />
identifier(attributes...)
creates an HTML element with identifier
as tag name and attributes
as attributes
div(ng-app='myApp')
<div ng-app='myapp'></div>
identifier { nodes... }
creates an HTML element with identifier
as tag name and nodes
as child elements
div {
span
hr/
}
<div><span><span><hr /></div>
#{ code }
creates a virtual HTML element with the return value of code
as contents
#{ Math.log(Math.E) }
1
#{ code }
object
creates a virtual HTML element with the return value of code
as contents, using second object
as context
prim.parse(template, { user: 'Steve', id: '306' });
#{ user } ':' #{ id }
Steve:306
"string"
creates a virtual HTML element with string
as contents
"Hello"
Hello
identifier | content |
creates an HTML element with identifier
as tag name and content
as raw text
div |Hello|
<div>Hello</div>
End of Markup (%) short circuits template and automatically closes all levels of nesting
div { div { div { 'Hello'%
<div><div><div>Hello</div></div></div>
Self-closing element with attributes
input(type='text' placeholder='Username')/
<input type='text' placeholder='Username' />
Mixed elements and strings
prim.parse(template, { user: 'Username' });
div {
'Welcome back, '
div(id='name' class='username') { #{ user } }
button |Log Out|
}
<div>Welcome back, <div id='name' class='username'>Username</div><button>Log Out</button></div>
Nodebuilding
Children, property, and attribute segments can be concatenated, allowing for more templating flexibility.
div (attr='someattr' ref='someref') { div div } (data='somedata') |Text| { span }
<div attr='someattr' ref='someref' data='somedata'><div></div><div></div>Text<span></span></div>
EOM
Because the EOM character resets the parse tree to the first node to the beginning of the current parse stream, it makes it easy to concatenate templates.
div { div { div { 'Hello'%span { span { span { 'Hello'%
<div><div><div>Hello</div></div></div><span><span><span>Hello</span></span></span>
npm install -g testem
npm test
- Embed templates in code (allowing for conditionals and looping)
- Compiled templates
- Generate README docs directly from code
- Create Gulp plugin
- Create React plugin
- Add badges
- Catch Jison up to PEG
- Write Atom/Sublime syntax package
- Implement "prim strict mode"