What is Clearsilver?
Clearsilver is a fast, powerful, and
language-neutral HTML template system. In both
static content sites and dynamic
HTML applications, it provides a separation between
presentation code and application logic which makes
working with your project easier.
The design of Clearsilver began in 1999, and evolved during
its use at onelist.com, egroups.com,
and Yahoo! Groups.
Today many other projects and
websites using it.
Why use Clearsilver?
High Performance and Language Neutral. Because Clearsilver is written
as a C-library, and exported to scripting languages like
Python, Perl, Java and Ruby via modules, it is extremely fast. This also
means you can work with the same template system independent
of the language your project is in.
Pluggable Look and Feel. Clearsilver makes it easy to
face lift a site by providing a new set of templates. It is
possible to easily run more than one look and feel at once,
and share components with a base look and feel to reduce
maintenance.
Internationalization Support. Clearsilver makes it
trivial to support internationlization. You write your templates
in your native language and included tools automatically extract
and catalog language strings for translation.
Advanced features. Built in support for advanced
features such as gzip compression,
smart whitespace stripping, parametric macros, online
debugging mode, url and javascript string escaping, and more.
How can I learn more?
The Clearsilver documentation explains both
the theory of operation for
Clearsilver itself, the C-api, and the extension module APIs.
[ What does Clearsilver look like?
]
[ How is Clearsilver different
from ASP, JSP, PHP? ]
[ How does Clearsilver compare with XML/XSLT? ]
[ Who is using Clearsilver? ]
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| Recent News |
Recent Discussion |
Release ClearSilver 0.10.5
[2007-Jul-12]
Mostly a bugfix release, see Release Notes
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Release ClearSilver 0.10.4
[2006-Nov-14]
Bugfixes, python 2.5 support and Automatic escape mode, see Release Notes
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Article about using ClearSilver in embedded systems
[2006-Jul-31]
Cliff Brake has an article about choosing
ClearSilver for use in embedded systems where memory and processor space is at
a premium. Thanks for the recommendation!
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Release ClearSilver 0.10.3
[2006-Mar-12]
Another release, fixes the main configure bug in the last release, and a bunch
of things you probably won't notice.
Release Notes
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Release ClearSilver 0.10.2
[2005-Dec-14]
Another release, mostly fixes for portability. If you've had problems
compiling clearsilver in the past, this release is for you. One
pervasive C API change for gcc4 where most functions take a 'char *'
instead of an 'unsigned char *' now.
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Re: ClearSilver for C CGI bindings
- Nikolai Kondrashov
... Yes, it is great unless you need session control and complex authentication and access control logic. ... No, we're using clean URL's and receiving paths
Re: ClearSilver for C CGI bindings
- Liran Tal
Hey Nikolai, Our permissions and authentications are controlled via the htpasswd/htaccess utility which is very common to Apache-style web servers. Could you
Re: ClearSilver for C CGI bindings
- Nikolai Kondrashov
... Well, we're using it exactly for such purpose. Currently our web-interface has over a hundred pages and we use it almost to its full potential. Despite a
Re: ClearSilver for C CGI bindings
- Liran Tal
I would love to hear about other "live" examples implemented in C for ClearSilver usage as it's what we are going for. In regards to the model, we're talking
Re: ClearSilver for C CGI bindings
- Brandon Long
The clearsilver model currently lacks a "top level" idea of how to accept and dispatch different types of requests. The closest we've come to releasing
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ClearSilver was written by
Brandon Long.
Many of the concepts behind ClearSilver are based on work by Scott
Shambarger, Paul Clegg and John Cwikla on the templating system
for onelist.com and eGroups.com.
Donations in the form of Good Tequila or Chicago Pizza
will be greatly appreciated by the authors.
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