Unless someone else has come up with exactly the templating scheme you are using (which is rather unlikely), you are going to have to adjust your template documents somewhat. However that needn't be much and there are plenty of templating engines around that are happy dealing with plain text. For example, with HTML::Template you could:

use strict; use warnings; use HTML::Template; my $str = <<STR; For example, if user defines in a template a string "%section_10%" I r +etrieve value "10", make a mySQL query to select some text from row with id = +10 and then replace text with query result "<!-- TMPL_VAR "section_10" -->". STR my @db = ('', qw(the quick brow fox jumps over the lazy dog should suf +fice)); my $template = HTML::Template->new (scalarref => \$str); my %usedParams = map {lc ($_) => 1} $template->param (); my @usedIds = map {m/section_(\d+)/; $1} keys %usedParams; $template->param ("section_$_" => $db[$_]) for grep {defined $_ && length $db[$_]} @usedIds; print $template->output ();

Prints:

For example, if user defines in a template a string "%section_10%" I r +etrieve value "10", make a mySQL query to select some text from row with id = +10 and then replace text with query result "should".

Which recognizes your variable pattern, extracts the index, performs the look up, then reconstitutes the variable to apply the value in the template.


True laziness is hard work

In reply to Re: Template engine question by GrandFather
in thread Template engine question by stan_b

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