NAME
    Template::Tiny::Strict - Template Toolkit reimplemented in as little
    code as possible

VERSION
    version 1.16

SYNOPSIS
        my $template = Template::Tiny::Strict->new(
            TRIM          => 1,
            forbid_undef  => $optional_boolean,
            forbid_unused => $optional_boolean,
        );

        # Print the template results to STDOUT
        $template->process( <<'END_TEMPLATE', { foo => 'World' } );
        Hello [% foo %]!
        END_TEMPLATE

        # Fatal: Unused variable
        $template->process( <<'END_TEMPLATE', { foo => 'World', bar => 'Hello' } );
        Hello [% foo %]!
        END_TEMPLATE

        # Fatal: Undefined variable
        $template->process( <<'END_TEMPLATE', { foo => undef } );
        Hello [% foo %]!
        END_TEMPLATE

DESCRIPTION
    Template::Tiny::Strict is a drop-in replacement for Template::Tiny. By
    default, the behavior is identical. However, we have two new *optional*
    arguments you can pass to the constructor:

    *   "forbid_undef"

        If true, *any* access of an undefined value in the template will
        cause the code to "croak" with an error such as:

            Undefined value in template path 'items.1'

    *   "forbid_unused"

        If true, *any* variable passed in the stash that is not used will
        cause the coad to "croak" with an error such as:

            The following variables were passed to the template but unused: 'name'

    As a convenience, all errors are gathered and reported at once.

    Note: what follows is the remainder of the original POD.

    It is intended for use in light-usage, low-memory, or low-cpu templating
    situations, where you may need to upgrade to the full feature set in the
    future, or if you want the retain the familiarity of TT-style templates.

    For the subset of functionality it implements, it has fully-compatible
    template and stash API. All templates used with Template::Tiny::Strict
    should be able to be transparently upgraded to full Template Toolkit.

    Unlike Template Toolkit, Template::Tiny::Strict will process templates
    without a compile phase (but despite this is still quicker, owing to
    heavy use of the Perl regular expression engine.

  SUPPORTED USAGE
    Only the default "[% %]" tag style is supported.

    Both the "[%+ +%]" style explicit whitespace and the "[%- -%]" style
    explicit chomp are support, although the "[%+ +%]" version is unneeded
    in practice as Template::Tiny::Strict does not support default-enabled
    "PRE_CHOMP" or "POST_CHOMP".

    Variable expressions in the form "[% foo.bar.baz %]" are supported.

    Appropriate simple behaviours for "ARRAY" references, "HASH" references
    and objects are supported. "VMethods" such as [% array.length %] are not
    supported at this time.

    "IF", "ELSE" and "UNLESS" conditional blocks are supported, but only
    with simple "[% foo.bar.baz %]" conditions.

    Support for looping (or rather iteration) is available in simple "[%
    FOREACH item IN list %]" form is supported. Other loop structures are
    not supported. Because support for arbitrary or infinite looping is not
    available, Template::Tiny::Strict templates are not turing complete.
    This is intentional.

    All of the four supported control structures
    "IF"/"ELSE"/"UNLESS"/"FOREACH" can be nested to arbitrary depth.

    The treatment of "_private" hash and method keys is compatible with
    Template Toolkit, returning null or false rather than the actual content
    of the hash key or method.

    Anything beyond the above is currently out of scope.

METHODS
  new
      my $template = Template::Tiny::Strict->new(
          TRIM => 1,
      );

    The "new" constructor is provided for compatibility with Template
    Toolkit.

    The only parameter it currently supports is "TRIM" (which removes
    leading and trailing whitespace from processed templates).

    Additional parameters can be provided without error, but will be
    ignored.

  process
      # DEPRECATED: Return template results (emits a warning)
      my $text = $template->process( \$input, $vars );

      # Print template results to STDOUT
      $template->process( \$input, $vars );

      # Generate template results into a variable
      my $output = '';
      $template->process( \$input, $vars, \$output );

    The "process" method is called to process a template.

    The first parameter is a reference to a text string containing the
    template text. A reference to a hash may be passed as the second
    parameter containing definitions of template variables.

    If a third parameter is provided, it must be a scalar reference to be
    populated with the output of the template.

    For a limited amount of time, the old deprecated interface will continue
    to be supported. If "process" is called without a third parameter, and
    in scalar or list contest, the template results will be returned to the
    caller.

    If "process" is called without a third parameter, and in void context,
    the template results will be "print()"ed to the currently selected file
    handle (probably "STDOUT") for compatibility with Template.

SEE ALSO
    Config::Tiny, CSS::Tiny, YAML::Tiny

AUTHOR
    Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2009 by Adam Kennedy.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.