Thymeleaf
Thymeleaf is a server-side Java template engine for both web and standalone environments. Its main goal is to bring natural templates to your development workflow — HTML that can be correctly displayed in browsers and also work as static prototypes.
Make sure the Thymeleaf plugin is enabled
In the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) select Plugins | Installed.
Make sure that the checkbox next to the Thymeleaf plugin is selected.
Otherwise, select the checkbox to enable the plugin.
Apply the changes and close the dialog. Restart the IDE if prompted.
For more information, refer to Install plugins.
Add Thymeleaf support
You can add Thymeleaf support when creating a project or module, or for an existing project or module. IntelliJ IDEA downloads the selected Thymeleaf library files and adds them to the dependencies of the corresponding module.
You can also create a Thymeleaf project by opening an appropriate pom.xml file. In this case, Maven will manage the dependencies in your project. For more information, refer to Maven.
New Java Enterprise project or module with Thymeleaf
In the main menu, go to
or .In the dialog that opens, select Jakarta EE from the list on the left and click Next.
In the Dependencies list, under Implementations, select Thymeleaf, and click Next.
Enter a name for your project or module and click Finish.
For more information about Java Enterprise projects, refer to Tutorial: Your first Java EE application.
New Spring project or module with Thymeleaf
Go to
or .In the dialog that opens, select Spring Initializr from the list on the left and click Next.
From the Dependencies list, click Template Engines and select the Thymeleaf option.
Click Create.
For more information about Spring projects, refer to Tutorial: Create your first Spring application.
Enable Thymeleaf support for an existing project
Open the build file in the editor (pom.xml or build.gradle depending on the build tool that you use in your project).
Add the following dependency, but make sure to change the version according to your project's requirements:
<dependency> <groupId>org.thymeleaf</groupId> <artifactId>thymeleaf</artifactId> <version>3.0.12.RELEASE</version> </dependency>implementation('org.thymeleaf:thymeleaf:3.0.12.RELEASE')Press Ctrl+Shift+O to import the changes.
For more information about working with build tools, refer to Maven or Gradle.
Thymeleaf support features
Support for Thymeleaf in IntelliJ IDEA includes the following:
- Code completion
Code completion for expressions and
th:*
attributes.- Navigation from a reference
Navigation from a reference in a template to the corresponding getter method, message in a .properties file, or another appropriate code fragment. Go to or press Ctrl+B.
- Navigation to type definitions
Go to
or press Ctrl+Shift+B.- Refactorings
The Rename refactoring for referenced properties, getter methods, iteration and status variables, and so on. Go to or press Shift+F6.
- Inspections
Code inspections that help you find and fix unresolved references and errors in expression syntax.
- Intention actions
Intention actions, such as Create property for unresolved message references or Import class for adding the
import
statements toorg.thymeleaf.*
classes.- Prototypes preview
Preview of your prototypes (the static part of your templates) in a web browser from the editor.
Preview Thymeleaf prototypes in a browser
IntelliJ IDEA allows you to preview the static part of your templates in a web browser or in the built-in preview in the same way do it with regular HTML files.
If you want to preview dynamic data in templates, you'll need to run your application. In the example below, we'll create a simple Thymeleaf template and use it as a view in a Spring MVC application.
Create Thymeleaf template
Create a new Spring Boot project with Thymeleaf as described in Add Thymeleaf support and name it
demo
.In the Project tool window (Alt+1), right-click the
demo
package located in src|main|java and select .Name the class
MyFirstApp
.Add a controller to the new class, for example:
package org.example.demo; import org.springframework.ui.Model; import org.springframework.stereotype.Controller; import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.RequestMapping; import java.util.Arrays; @Controller public class MyFirstApp { @RequestMapping("/home") public String index(Model model) { model.addAttribute("message", "Hello Thymeleaf"); model.addAttribute("items", Arrays.asList("Item 1", "Item 2", "Item 3")); return "start_page"; } }Under the resources directory, create a directory named
templates
.In
templates
, create an HTML file namedstart_page
.This template uses the
${message}
and${items}
variables (passed in a controller we've added earlier) and the#dates
Thymeleaf object, which is used to handle dates.<!DOCTYPE HTML> <html lang=""> <head> <title>Hello</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"/> </head> <body> <h1 th:text="${message}"></h1> <p>Thymeleaf Iteration:</p> <ul> <li th:each="item : ${items}" th:text="${item}"></li> </ul> <p th:text="'Current Year: ' + ${#dates.format(#dates.createNow(), 'yyyy')}"></p> </body> </html>
IntelliJ IDEA recognizes the template and allows you to navigate from the variables to the controller code where they were declared by pressing Ctrl+B.
You can also navigate from the controller to the template: In MyFirstApp.java
, click in the gutter and select Navigate to related views. Notice that start_page
is marked as a link with an underline, which means IntelliJ IDEA detects such a template in your project: You can Ctrl-click this link (or press Ctrl+B on it) to navigate to the template.
Preview template
Run the application: press Shift+F10 or make sure the DemoApplication is selected in the Run widget in the window header and click next to it.
Open localhost:8080/home in your browser.
Spring will render the start_page
template and replace the variables with their values.