Marten is a Crystal Web framework that enables pragmatic development and rapid prototyping. It provides a consistent and extensible set of tools that developers can leverage to build web applications without reinventing the wheel.
🎯 Simple
Marten's syntax is inherited from the slickness and simplicity of the Crystal programming language. On top of that, the framework tries to be KISS and DRY compliant as much as possible to reduce time-to-market.
⚡ Fast
Marten gives you the ability to build full-featured web applications by leveraging the bare metal performances of the Crystal programming language. It also tries to optimize for decent compile times.
🧳 Full-featured
Marten adheres to the "batteries included" philosophy. Out of the box, it provides the tools and features that are commonly required by web applications: ORM, migrations, translations, templating engines, sessions, emailing, authentication, etc.
🔧 Extensible
Marten gives you the ability to contribute extra functionalities to the framework easily. Things like custom model field implementations, new route parameter types, session stores, etc... can be registered to the framework easily.
💠 App-oriented
Marten allows separating projects into a set of logical "apps". These apps can also be extracted to contribute features and behaviors to other Marten projects. The goal here is to allow the creation of a powerful apps ecosystem over time.
🛡️ Secure
Marten comes with security mechanisms out of the box. Things like cross-site request forgeries, clickjacking, or SQL injections are taken care of by the framework to avoid common security issues.
The tools you need are built into the framework. Database ORM, translations, migrations, templates, sessions, emailing, authentication, and many more can be leveraged right away.
Design your models easily
Marten comes with an object-relational-mapper (ORM) that you can leverage to describe your database using Crystal classes and a convenient DSL.
class Article < Marten::Model
field :id, :big_int, primary_key: true, auto: true
field :title, :string, max_size: 128
field :content, :text
field :author, :many_to_one, to: User
end
Process requests with handlers
Handlers are responsible for processing web requests and for returning responses. This can involve loading records from the database, rendering HTML templates, or producing JSON payloads.
class ArticleListHandler < Marten::Handler
def get
render "articles/list.html", { articles: Article.all }
end
end
Render user-facing content with templates
Templates provide a convenient way to define your presentation logic and to write contents (such as HTML) that are rendered dynamically. This rendering can involve model records or any other variables you define.
{% extend "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
<ul>
{% for article in articles %}
<li>{{ article.title }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endblock content %}
Online browsable documentation is available at https://martenframework.com/docs.
Are you new to the Marten web framework? The following resources will help you get started:
- The installation guide will help you install Crystal and the Marten CLI
- The tutorial will help you discover the main features of the framework by creating a simple web application
Morgan Aubert (@ellmetha) and contributors.
The Marten web framework initially draws its inspiration from Django and Ruby on Rails. You can browse the Acknowledgments section of the documentation to learn more about the various inspirations and contributions that helped shape Marten.
MIT. See LICENSE
for more details.