vote up 6 vote down star
3

I'm looking for a solution that allows me to write native Emacs Lisp code and at compile time turns it into HTML, like Franz's htmlgen:

(html
 ((:div class "post")
  (:h1 "Title")
  (:p "Hello, World!")))

Of course I can write my own macros, but I'm interested if there are any projects around this problem.

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Why do you want it to be in Emacs Lisp, an antiquated dialect? You can easily interface with Common Lisp using SLIME, and then you could use htmlgen or yaclml or htout or LML(2) or CL-WHO or Scribble or ... – Jouni K. Seppänen Apr 28 at 12:36
I use a framework written in Emacs Lisp that I'd like to extend with this HTML generating feature. It is tightly integrated with Emacs, that's why I'm looking for an Elisp solution. – Török Gábor Apr 28 at 13:09

5 Answers

vote up 2 vote down

As you found out, xmlgen generates XML from a list structure. What I did find disappointing with the `xmlgen package that the format it supports is not quite the inverse of Emacs' xml parser.

I did add this to my copy of xmlgen:

;; this creates a routine to be the inverse of what xml-parse does
;;;###autoload
(defun xml-gen (form &optional in-elm level)
  "Convert a sexp to xml:
  '(p :class \"big\")) => \"<p class=\\\"big\\\" />\""
  (let ((level (or level 0)))
    (cond
     ((numberp form) (number-to-string form))
     ((stringp form) form)
     ((listp form)
      (destructuring-bind (xml attrs) (xml-gen-extract-plist form)
        (let ((el (car xml)))
          (unless (symbolp el)
            (error "Element must be a symbol (got '%S')." el))
          (setq el (symbol-name el))
          (concat "<" el (xml-gen-attr-to-string attrs)
                  (if (> (length xml) 1)
                      (concat ">" (mapconcat
                                   (lambda (s) (xml-gen s el (1+ level)))
                                   (cdr xml)
                                   "")
                              "</" el ">")
                    "/>"))))))))

(defun xml-gen-attr-to-string (plist)
  (reduce 'concat (mapcar (lambda (p) (concat " " (symbol-name (car p)) "=\"" (cdr p) "\"")) plist)))

(defun xml-gen-extract-plist (list)
  (list (cons (car list) (let ((kids (xml-node-children list)))
                           (if (= 1 (length kids))
                               kids
                             (remove-if-not 'listp kids))))
        (xml-node-attributes list)))

Note: the interface for this is xml-gen (not xmlgen which is the original parsing).

With this interface, the following holds:

(string-equal (xml-gen (car (xml-parse-region <some-region-of-xml>)))
              <some-region-of-xml>)

and

(equal (car (xml-parse-region (insert (xml-gen <some-xml-form>))))
       <some-xml-form>)

The new xml-gen does not strive to preserve the whitespace around that the xml-parse-region routine generates.

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vote up 1 vote down check

Meanwhile, I found some code that contains something similar I want. Now I can write:

(views-with-html
 ((body)
  (h1 "Title")
  ((p (class . "entry")) "Hello, World!")))

The implementation has a few limitations (e.g. hard-coded element list), but it seems to be a good starting point.

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vote up 3 vote down

This could be a starting point: http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/HtmlLite

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Thanks, this is useful, too. My only problem with it that it pollutes the namespace with many functions instead of using a macro. – Török Gábor Apr 29 at 7:00
vote up 0 vote down

This is not quite what you're looking for, but there's a 20 minute video where a guy creates a simple website using UCW, the UnCommon Web application framework. It's all done in Emacs using lisp...

Here is a link to the transcript (all the code (~25 lines) is available at the end of the transcript).

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Thanks, but that's really not what I'm looking for. I've got an existing Elisp framework that has some HTML generating facilities—currently with hard-coded HTML strings I'd like to replace. – Török Gábor Apr 28 at 14:16
vote up 1 vote down

If you can write your own macros, then Muse could be of help. As far as I know you can modify/configure pretty much everything. I use it myself and I love it. It's more content management than anything, but I've used it to generate a lot of complex html using new macros.

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Isn't Muse for converting one markup to another? I don't want to define a new markup, I'd like to write native Elisp code. – Török Gábor Apr 28 at 12:19

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