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130 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
130 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
Hello World is a good start, but what if you want something a bit more fancy.. Something like an HTML document saying "Hello World". If that's what you want, follow along:
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## Basic Webpage
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Let's start our webpage with.. well.. a webpage. But before we create a webpage we need to place it somewhere Crow recognizes, for now this directory is going to be called `templates`, but we can [change it later](../../guides/templating/#page).
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Once our `templates` folder is created, we can create our HTML document inside it, let's call it `fancypage.html`.
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After that we can just place something simple inside it like:
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``` html title="templates/fancypage.html"
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<html>
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<body>
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<p>Hello World!</p>
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</body>
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</html>
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```
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<br>
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Now that we have our HTML page ready, let's take our Hello World example from earlier:
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``` cpp linenums="1"
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#include "crow.h"
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//#include "crow_all.h"
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int main()
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{
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crow::SimpleApp app; //define your crow application
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//define your endpoint at the root directory
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CROW_ROUTE(app, "/")([](){
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return "Hello world";
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});
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//set the port, set the app to run on multiple threads, and run the app
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app.port(18080).multithreaded().run();
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}
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```
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<br>
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And now let's modify it so that it returns our cool page:
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``` cpp title="/main.cpp" linenums="1" hl_lines="10 11"
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#include "crow.h"
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//#include "crow_all.h"
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int main()
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{
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crow::SimpleApp app;
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//define your endpoint at the root directory
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CROW_ROUTE(app, "/")([](){
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auto page = crow::mustache::load_text("fancypage.html");
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return page;
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});
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app.port(18080).multithreaded().run();
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}
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```
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Your project should look something something like:
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```
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./
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|-templates/
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|-main.cpp
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|-crow_all.h
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```
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or
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```
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./
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|-templates/
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| |-fancypage.html
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|-crow/
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| |-include/...
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| |-crow.h
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|-main.cpp
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```
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Once the code is done compiling, if we call `http://localhost:18080/` we get our Hello World in an HTML document rather than just plain text.
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!!! note
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Compilation instructions are available for [Linux](../setup/linux#compiling-your-project), [MacOS](../setup/macos#compiling-using-a-compiler-directly), and [Windows](../setup/windows#getting-and-compiling-crow)
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## Template Webpage with a variable
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But we can make things even more exciting, we can greet a user by their name instead!!
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Let's start with our webpage, and modify it with a little bit of [mustache](../../guides/templating) syntax:
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``` html title="templates/fancypage.html" hl_lines="4"
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<html>
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<body>
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<p>Hello {{person}}!</p> <!--(1)-->
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</body>
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</html>
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```
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1. `{{}}` in mustache define a simple variable
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<br>
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Now let's modify our C++ code to use the variable we just added to our webpage (or template):
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``` cpp title="/main.cpp" linenums="1" hl_lines="9-12"
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#include "crow.h"
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//#include "crow_all.h"
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int main()
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{
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crow::SimpleApp app;
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//define your endpoint at the root directory
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CROW_ROUTE(app, "/<string>")([](std::string name){ // (1)
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auto page = crow::mustache::load("fancypage.html"); // (2)
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crow::mustache::context ctx ({{"person", name}}); // (3)
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return page.render(ctx); //(4)
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});
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app.port(18080).multithreaded().run();
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}
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```
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1. We are adding a `string` variable to the URL and a counterpart (`std::string name`) to our route - this can be anything the user wants.
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2. We are using `load()` instead of `load_text()` since we have an actual variable now.
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3. We are creating a new [context](../../guides/templating/#context) containing the `person` variable from our template and the `name` we got from the URL.
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4. We are using `render(ctx)` to apply our context to the template.
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Now (after compiling the code and running the executable a second time) calling `http://localhost:18080/Bob` should return a webpage containing "Hello Bob!". **We did it!**
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For more details on templates and HTML pages in Crow please go [here](../../guides/templating/)
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