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ERB
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Comes with Ruby
Since ERB is included with Ruby out of the box, there is no additional installation and setup required. The fact that it's included by default in Ruby, a lot of projects use it.
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Con
Verbose
Since ERB uses HTML syntax with Ruby logic inside it can get a little verbose like HTML files usually do.
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Pro
HTML with embedded Ruby
ERB is a way to embed Ruby into plain HTML, which means there is no need to learn a new syntax for HTML. This makes ERB fast to learn, and a great option to use on projects that have multiple developers/designers.
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Pro
Familiar even for developers with no Ruby experience
ERB's interpolated tags are very familiar to developers who have worked with PHP, ASP or JSP, even though they may not have any prior experience with Ruby.
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Pro
Maintained by Ruby on Rails developers
Due to Ruby on Rails (RoR) use of ERB, the developers of RoR will continue to maintain ERB, guaranteeing project health.
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Pro
Best Performance
It has the best performance of all of ruby templates, although it wasn't designed for productivity as HAML or SLIM.
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9
1
Haml
All
5
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
2
Top
Pro
Easy to learn
There are plenty of learning resources available for those who want to learn Haml. The documentation is detailed and well organized, and Haml is easy to pick up.
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Con
Bad Performance
The rendering time with haml is slower than its competitors.
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Pro
Efficient
By using indentation rather than closing tags and eliminating curly braces, Haml is fast to code. For example This: <div id ="lower"> <div class="right column"> <div id="currentDate"><%= print_date %></div> </div> </div> Can be written as: %div#lower %div.right.column %div#currentDate= print_date
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Con
Whitespace sensitivity can be problematic
Haml uses indentation to define structure, rather than closing tags. Though this, in most cases, makes code more efficient to write, it can also cause problems. Being off by one space can cause an error or change the structure of the code.
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Pro
Clean syntax
Haml's syntax is very clean and pleasant to look at. It doesn't use HTML tags and it's not verbose at all. The templates are easily readable.
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15
3
Slim
All
17
Experiences
Pros
12
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Well organized and thorough documentation
Slim's documentation is well organized and detailed, every concept is thoroughly explained and it is very helpful for both advanced users and beginners.
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Con
Very little consistency among different versions
There have been quite some changes that break the compatibility between Slim 2 and Slim 3. Even if you learned how to work with the Slim 2, you will find that Slim 3 requires re-training.
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Pro
A good starting point
Slim is minimal and that is a good thing if you want to start from there. It can be easily extended and even supports popular packages that are used in Laravel (like Illuminate\Database (eloquent)) for example.
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Con
Dependency injection is too weak
It is not really dependency injection, but just a configurable container.
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Pro
REST based
REST fans will love the REST based architecture.
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Con
Needs strong bases to create dependencies
The dependency container schema of Slim is one of the biggest PROS and CONS of the framework. It is true that this schema brings so much flexibility to add anything, but another thing that is true is that you need to have strong bases of patterns, and an extensive knowledge of your libraries to convert it into a Slim dependency.
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Pro
Supports tie-ins for Rack-like middleware
Rack is an interface used in Ruby frameworks used to group and order modules, which most of the time are Ruby classes, and specify between them. Slim uses a simple concept for it's middleware. By wrapping HTTP requests and responses it unifies the middleware into a single method call.
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Con
Too minimal
While it's true that Slim is a microframework, it's still too minimal. When used for throwaway projects or simple prototypes, it's perfect. But in the long run, it becomes less and less useful and you end up in implementing a full custom framework in trying to tackle all the missing features.
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Pro
Useful classes
Contains classes for managing requests, responses, cookies, logging, views, HTTP caching, and more.
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Pro
Flexible
Slim doesn't demand that you stick to a fixed folder structure. As long as you load Slim the right way you can do anything from there the way you like it.
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Pro
Extremely lightweight
Paired with swoole it's a micro service powerhouse.
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Pro
Open source
The Slim Framework is open source and is released under the MIT public license
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Pro
Extremely customizable
You can add any dependency, package or class that you want to use as a contained dependency.
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Pro
Supports Php 5.3 and PHP 7
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Pro
Makes it easy to understand the way some abstract functions and classes are built
In Django most things are abstracted, you just call some function or class without knowing how they were built, but with Slim, you end up understanding the way some abstract functions and classes are built.
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Pro
Hooks for executing code at different points in its life-cycle
Slim supports code hooks for executing functions at different points in time during the application's lifecycle.
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Specs
License:
GPL 2
Written in:
PHP
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Experiences
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72
Liquid
All
3
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Clear distinction between presentation and application
Liquid allows developers to create a clear distinction between the presentation and application layer.
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Con
Boolean algebra has some issues
Liquid has some known issues with boolean algebra when it comes to some advanced expressions. Liquid::Template.parse("{% if false and false or true %} foo {% endif %}").render # => "" false and false or true # => true It seems that Liquid simply parses from left to right, and if it finds a false and X it immediately returns false.
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Pro
Secure
Liquid templates are secure out of the box. They can be used for applications where users can edit the appearance without allowing them to run any server-side code. Liquid does just that without any needed configuration.
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3
1
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