If you're interested in Java template engines for the client side (SPAs), you can look at Flavour: https://flavour.sourceforge.io/
While templates are a big part of Flavour, it also includes routing, components, and idiomatic invocation of Java services.
The book on Flavour is here: https://frequal.com/Flavour/book.html
Example 5-letter word game single-page app made with 100% Java, 100% Flavour: https://frequal.com/wordii/
Also, for SPA with SSR take a look at Double View https://github.com/emeraldpay/double-view
It's a React renderer that works on Java backend by using GraalVM, and then the same JS template continues to work in browser.
Looks interesting. For me I settled on JTE as the go-to template engine for Java. For anyone curious: https://jte.gg @freakynit - have you seen this one before? how's it compares with Blueprint?
Powerful. But I absolutely adore nunjucks syntax and how easy it is to extend it. Hence, I built Blueprint to give me that same feel in Java.
I have used this btw, professionally :)
Interesting. I have used free marker. Pretty happy with it in general. But inability to mutate collections is an annoyance.
I will checkout blueprint. A zero dependency library is always a bonus. I don’t see any mention of thread safety in the docs for the engine though.
Hey, Blueprint rendering was already thread-safe. Only the function/filter registrations, IF done during rendering phase, was not thread-safe.
I have just pushed small update to make even these thread-safe now. Entire library is now fully thread-safe.
Updated README as well.
Thanks for pointing this out.
Good to know.
Normally I'd use Spring Boot and get the batteries-included experience if I ever were to make web with Java.
But I could totally imagine needing a pure, well-made, zero-deps template engine for custom jobs.
I certainly have similar libraries in my bookmarks for other languages, like Haskell [1] and Rust [2].
[1]: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/heterocephalus
[2]: https://crates.io/crates/minijinja
Isn't Pebble Templates similar to this?
Ahh... this is very very similar. I don't know why it didn't show up in Google search. Thanks for mentioning this.
We never hear about Java on this forum. That makes a post like this peculiarly interesting
Syntax looks very much like Liquid. I feel like that syntax is becoming a standard.
afaik django or jinja invented this syntax? then we saw handlebars, which is where liquid got its influence.