From ac73229737975338a38ef23381aaf89f9294242b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Erik Flodin Date: Thu, 5 Dec 2024 22:29:13 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update default template docs to match 3.3.0 --- _docs/070_templates.md | 23 ++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/_docs/070_templates.md b/_docs/070_templates.md index 3c8d8c7..b2037f0 100644 --- a/_docs/070_templates.md +++ b/_docs/070_templates.md @@ -95,17 +95,14 @@ whitespace between the variable name and the double braces. The `{{` and if-else-endif : Entire blocks of content can be included or excluded based on the value of a -variable. Only equality can be tested. These blocks must start with -`{% if yadm.variable == "value" %}` and end with `{% endif %}`. An alternative -block can also be specified using the directive `{% else %}`. These directives -must appear on lines by themselves. They may not appear on the same line. The -"if" directive only supports testing a single variable, and there is no "elif" -directive as there is in Jinja. -

-If multiple classes are defined, `yadm.class=="someclass"` will be true if *any* -of the defined classes are "someclass". -

-Here is an example. +variable. Both equality (`==`) and inequality (`!=`) can be tested. These +blocks must start with `{% if yadm.variable == "value" %}` and end with +`{% endif %}`. An alternative block can also be specified using the directive +`{% else %}`. These directives must appear on lines by themselves. They may not +appear on the same line. The "if" directive only supports testing a single +variable, and there is no "elif" directive as there is in Jinja.

If +multiple classes are defined, `yadm.class=="someclass"` will be true if *any* +of the defined classes are "someclass".

Here is an example. ```jinja {% if yadm.os == "Darwin" %} @@ -119,8 +116,8 @@ include : Content can be included from external files using the `{% include "filename" %}` syntax. The filename may include variables and should be either a path relative to the current template or an absolute -path. The included file may itself also use variables, but if-else-endif or -include directives are not supported. An example: +path. The included file may itself also use variables, if-else-endif and +include directives. An example: ```jinja {% include "extra/config.{{ yadm.os }}" %}