# Writing Templates Suppose you've written a fabulously popular library, used the world over by adoring fans. For the purposes of this document, let's say this library is called "liquid-cool". If using liquid-cool takes a bit of setup, or if you'd just like to give your users a little guidance on how one might best create a new project which uses liquid-cool, you might want to provide a template for it (just like how `lein` already provides built-in templates for "app", "plugin", and so on). Let's assume your library's project dir is `~/dev/liquid-cool`. Create a template for it like so: cd ~/dev lein new template liquid-cool --to-dir liquid-cool-template Note that you'll now have a new and separate project named "liquid-cool-template". It will have a group-id of "liquid-cool", and an artifact-id of "lein-template". > All lein templates have an artifact-id of "lein-template", and are > differentiated by their group-id, which always should match the > project for which they provide a template. ## Structure The files that your template will provide to users are in `src/leiningen/new/liquid_cool`. lein-newnew starts you off with just one, named "foo.clj". You can see it referenced in `src/leiningen/new/liquid_cool.clj`, right underneath the `->files data` line. You can delete `foo.clj` if you like (and it's corresponding line in `liquid_cool.clj`), and start populating that `src/leiningen/new/liquid_cool` directory with the files you wish to be part of your template. For everything you add, make sure the `liquid_cool.clj` file receives corresponding entries in that `->files` call. For examples to follow, have a look inside [the \*.clj files for the built-in templates](https://github.com/technomancy/leiningen/tree/stable/resources/leiningen/new). While developing a template, if you're in the template project lein-newnew will pick it up and you'll be able to test it. However, if you want to use it on your system without putting it on clojars, just `lein install` your template. ## Distributing your template Templates are just maven artifacts. Particularly, they need only be on the classpath when `lein new` is called. So, as a side-effect, you can just put your templates in a jar and toss them on clojars and have people install them like normal Leiningen plugins. In Leiningen 2.x, templates get dynamically fetched if they're not found. So for instance `lein new heroku myproject` will find the latest version of the `heroku/lein-template` project from Clojars and use that. Users of Leiningen 1.x (1.6.2 or later) can also use the template if they install the `lein-newnew` plugin: $ lein plugin install lein-newnew 0.3.6 $ lein new foo $ lein new plugin lein-foo