Source: libtext-xslate-perl Maintainer: Debian Perl Group Uploaders: Nick Morrott Section: perl Testsuite: autopkgtest-pkg-perl Priority: optional Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 10), libdata-messagepack-perl, libfile-copy-recursive-perl, libmodule-build-perl (>= 0.400500), libmodule-build-xsutil-perl, libmouse-perl (>= 2.5.0), libtest-requires-perl, perl (>= 5.25.3) Standards-Version: 4.1.3 Vcs-Browser: https://anonscm.debian.org/cgit/pkg-perl/packages/libtext-xslate-perl.git Vcs-Git: https://anonscm.debian.org/git/pkg-perl/packages/libtext-xslate-perl.git Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Text-Xslate Package: libtext-xslate-perl Architecture: any Depends: ${misc:Depends}, ${perl:Depends}, ${shlibs:Depends}, libdata-messagepack-perl, libmouse-perl (>= 2.5.0) Description: scalable template engine for Perl 5 (C/XS accelerated) Text::Xslate is a template engine, tuned for persistent applications, safe as an HTML generator, and with rich features. . There are a lot of template engines in CPAN, for example Template-Toolkit, Text::MicroTemplate, HTML::Template, and so on, but all of them have some weak points: a full-featured template engine may be slow, while a fast template engine may be too simple to use. This is why Text::Xslate is developed, which is to be the best template engine for web applications. . The concept of Text::Xslate is strongly influenced by Text::MicroTemplate and Template-Toolkit 2, but the central philosophy of Text::Xslate is different from them. That is, the philosophy is one of sandboxing; that the template logic should not have no access outside the template beyond your permission.