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The Super Simple View Engine
The Super Simple View Engine, also known as SSVE, is a regex (the implementation uses regular expressions to perform substitutions) based view engine that was designed to support simple templating scenarios, so a lot of the features you see in other engines may not be available.
There is no need to install a separate Nuget to use the engine as it is embedded into the main Nancy assembly, and will automatically be wired up and ready to use in your application. The engine handles views with either sshtml
, html
or htm
file extensions.
Models can either be standard types, or ExpandoObjects
(or, in reality, any other object implementing IDynamicMetaObjectProvider
that implements IDictionary<string, object>
to access its properties).
All commands have an optional semi-colon delimiter which can be used to remove ambiguity. Any [.Parameters]
parameter can be multiple levels deep (e.g. This.Property.That.Property
).
As SSVE is a regular expression based view engine there is no “code execution”, so you cannot specify an arbitrary chunk of your own code to execute. The built in syntax/commands that you can use are as follows.
Please note that all quotes should be single-quotes in the expressions
Replaces with the string representation of the parameter, or the model itself if a parameter is not specified. If the substitution can not be performed, for instance if you specify an invalid model property, it will be substituted with [Err!]
Syntax
@Model[.Parameters]
Example
Hello @Model.Name, your age is @Model.User.Age
Enables you to iterate over models that are collection. Iterators cannot be nested
Syntax
@Each[.Parameters]
[@Current[.Parameters]]
@EndEach
@Each
will implicitly be associated with the model and for each iteration the @Current
will represent the current item in the collection. @Current
can be used multiple times in the iterator block, and is accessed in the same way as @Model
.
Example
@Each.Users
Hello @Current.Name!
@EndEach
Parameters must be a boolean (see Implicit Conditionals below). Nesting of @If and @IfNot statements is not supported.
Syntax:
@If[Not].Parameters
[contents]
@EndIf
Example
@IfNot.HasUsers
No users found!
@EndIf
If the model has property that implements ICollection
then you can use an implicit conditional. The implicit conditional syntax is the same as a normal conditional, but the Parameters
part can have a Has
-prefix. The conditional will be true if the collection contains items, and false if it does not or if it is null.
Syntax
Has[CollectionPropertyName]
Example
@If.HasUsers
Users found!
@EndIf
The above example will expand to "Users found!" if the model has a collection called Users
and it contains items; if the collection is empty then the text would not be displayed.
Both the @Model
and @Current keywords
(with or without parameters) can have an optional !
operator, after the @
, to HTML encode the output.
Syntax
@!Model[.Parameter]
@!Current[.Parameter]
Example
@!Model.Test
@Each
@!Current.Test
@EndEach
Renders a partial view. A property of the current model can be specified to be used as the partial view's model, or it may be omitted to use the current view's model instead. The file extension of the view is optional.
Syntax
@Partial['<view name>'[, Model.Property]]
Example
// Renders the partial view with the same model as the parent
@Partial['subview.sshtml'];
// Renders the partial view using the User as the model
@Partial['subview.sshtml', Model.User];
You can put shared layout in a master page and declare content sections that will be populated by the views. It is possible to have nested master pages and you are not obligated to provide content for all of the content sections.
The master pages will have access to the @Model
of the view and the file extension is optional when specifying the name of the master to use in your view.
You can use the @Section
tag multiple times and is used to both declare a content section, in a master page, and to define the content blocks of a view.
Syntax
@Master['<name>']
@Section['<name>']
@EndSection
Example
// master.sshtml
<html>
<body>
@Section['Content'];
</body>
</html>
// index.sshtml
@Master['master.sshtml']
@Section['Content']
This is content on the index page
@EndSection
Renders an anti-forgery token, on the page, in an hidden input to prevent cross-site request forgery attacks. The token will automatically be validated when a new request is posted to the server (assuming CSRF protection hasn’t been turned off).
Syntax
@AntiForgeryToken
Example
@AntiForgeryToken
Expands a relative paths to a fully qualified URL.
Syntax
@Path['<relative-path>']
Example
@Path['~/relative/url/image.png']
Starting from v1.2, SSVE performs automatic path expansion in all HTML attributes (more specifically, in all name="value"
pairs, both with single and double quotes around value
) where attribute value starts with ~/
. For example, <a href="@Path['~/relative/path']" ...>
can be significantly shortened to <a href="~/relative/path" ...>
.
It is possible to extend the SSVE to support additional 'matchers' to meet your needs. This stackoverflow post gives an example of how to do this by describing how you could extend the SSVE to support text translation substitutions similar to the "@Text.TranslationKey" token support of the Razor View Engine.
« Part 10. View Engines — Documentation overview — Part 10. Razor »
- Introduction
- Exploring the Nancy module
- Routing
- Taking a look at the DynamicDictionary
- Async
- View Engines
- Using Models
- Managing static content
- Authentication
- Lifecycle of a Nancy Application
- Bootstrapper
- Adding a custom FavIcon
- Diagnostics
- Generating a custom error page
- Localization
- SSL Behind Proxy
- Testing your application
- The cryptography helpers
- Validation
- Hosting Nancy with ASP.NET
- Hosting Nancy with WCF
- Hosting Nancy with Azure
- Hosting Nancy with Suave.IO
- Hosting Nancy with OWIN
- Hosting Nancy with Umbraco
- Hosting Nancy with Nginx on Ubuntu
- Hosting Nancy with FastCgi
- Self Hosting Nancy
- Implementing a Host
- Accessing the client certificate when using SSL
- Running Nancy on your Raspberry Pi
- Running Nancy with ASP.NET Core 3.1