ref: d6ed17c60fd13c933347110c720afa09e04df1c8
dir: /tpl/internal/go_templates/texttemplate/examplefunc_test.go/
// Copyright 2012 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // +build go1.13 package template_test import ( "log" "os" "strings" "text/template" ) // This example demonstrates a custom function to process template text. // It installs the strings.Title function and uses it to // Make Title Text Look Good In Our Template's Output. func ExampleTemplate_func() { // First we create a FuncMap with which to register the function. funcMap := template.FuncMap{ // The name "title" is what the function will be called in the template text. "title": strings.Title, } // A simple template definition to test our function. // We print the input text several ways: // - the original // - title-cased // - title-cased and then printed with %q // - printed with %q and then title-cased. const templateText = ` Input: {{printf "%q" .}} Output 0: {{title .}} Output 1: {{title . | printf "%q"}} Output 2: {{printf "%q" . | title}} ` // Create a template, add the function map, and parse the text. tmpl, err := template.New("titleTest").Funcs(funcMap).Parse(templateText) if err != nil { log.Fatalf("parsing: %s", err) } // Run the template to verify the output. err = tmpl.Execute(os.Stdout, "the go programming language") if err != nil { log.Fatalf("execution: %s", err) } // Output: // Input: "the go programming language" // Output 0: The Go Programming Language // Output 1: "The Go Programming Language" // Output 2: "The Go Programming Language" }