// Package main shows how to use jet templates embedded in your application with ease using the Iris built-in Jet view engine. // This example is a customized fork of https://github.com/CloudyKit/jet/tree/master/examples/asset_packaging, so you can // notice the differences side by side. For example, you don't have to use any external package inside your application, // Iris manually builds the template loader for binary data when Asset and AssetNames are available via tools like the go-bindata. package main import ( "os" "github.com/kataras/iris/v12" ) // $ go install github.com/go-bindata/go-bindata/v3/go-bindata@latest // // $ go-bindata -fs -prefix "views" ./views/... // $ go run . // // System files are not used, you can optionally delete the folder and run the example now. func main() { app := iris.New() tmpl := iris.Jet(AssetFile(), ".jet") app.RegisterView(tmpl) app.Get("/", func(ctx iris.Context) { if err := ctx.View("index.jet"); err != nil { ctx.HTML("

%s

", err.Error()) return } }) addr := ":8080" if port := os.Getenv("PORT"); port != "" { addr = ":" + port } app.Listen(addr) }