# coin transforms a template string to its refined version by substituting its placeholders with concrete values; hence it can be used as a very basic template engine ## Building ### Requirements - shell interpreter ### Instructions - execute `tools/build` ## Installation ### Requirements - shell interpreter ### Instructions - (as `root`) execute `tools/install` ## Usage ### Requirements - Python 3 interpreter ### Explanation - see `coin -h` ### Examples #### basic ```sh echo '{{flowers}} are {{color}}' | coin -a 'flowers:roses' -a 'color:red' # roses are red ``` The same result can be produced by using multiple `coin` calls: ```sh echo '{{flowers}} are {{color}}' | coin -a 'flowers:roses' | coin -a 'color:red' # roses are red ``` In some contextes curly brackets might be reserved or not available for other reasons. This can be mitigated by using different placeholder indicators: ```sh echo '<> are <>' | coin -o '<<' -c '>>' -a 'flowers:roses' -a 'color:red' # roses are red ``` #### file arguments ```sh echo -n "cornflowers" > /tmp/flowers.txt echo -n "blue" > /tmp/color.txt echo '{{flowers}} are {{color}}' | coin -a 'flowers:@/tmp/flowers.txt' -a 'color:@/tmp/color.txt' # cornflowers are blue ``` #### data file ```sh echo -e "flowers: daffodills\ncolor: yellow" > /tmp/data.yaml echo '{{flowers}} are {{color}}' | coin -d /tmp/data.yaml # daffodills are yellow ```