/* * Copyright 2014 Attila Szegedi, Daniel Dekany, Jonathan Revusky * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package freemarker.template; import freemarker.template.utility.ClassUtil; /** * The common super-interface of the interfaces that stand for the FreeMarker Template Language (FTL) data types. * The template language only deals with {@link TemplateModel}-s, not directly with plain Java objects. (For example, * it doesn't understand {@link java.lang.Number}, but {@link TemplateNumberModel}.) This is why the * data-model (aka. the "template context" in other languages) is (automatically) mapped to a tree of * {@link TemplateModel}-s. * * <p>Mapping the plain Java objects to {@link TemplateModel}-s (or the other way around sometimes) is the * responsibility of the {@link ObjectWrapper} (can be set via {@link Configuration#setObjectWrapper(ObjectWrapper)}). * But not all {@link TemplateModel}-s are for wrapping a plain object. For example, a value created within a template * is not made to wrap an earlier existing object; it's a value that has always existed in the template language's * domain. Users can also write {@link TemplateModel} implementations and put them directly into the data-model for * full control over how that object is seen from the template. Certain {@link TemplateModel} interfaces doesn't * even have equivalent in Java. For example the directive type ({@link TemplateDirectiveModel}) is like that. * * <p>Because {@link TemplateModel} "subclasses" are all interfaces, a value in the template language can have multiple * types. However, to prevent ambiguous situations, it's not recommended to make values that implement more than one of * these types: string, number, boolean, date. The intended applications are like string+hash, string+method, * hash+sequence, etc. * * @see ClassUtil#getFTLTypeDescription(TemplateModel) */ public interface TemplateModel { /** * A general-purpose object to represent nothing. It acts as * an empty string, false, empty sequence, empty hash, and * null-returning method model. */ TemplateModel NOTHING = GeneralPurposeNothing.getInstance(); }