Precompile Handlebars templates for Ember.js.
This plugin requires Grunt ^0.4.5
.
If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:
npm install grunt-ember-templates --save-dev
Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-ember-templates');
If you use earlier version of Ember, please use the grunt-ember-templates
v0.6
.
- Install Ember.js with bower:
$ bower install ember --save
- Install this package with:
$ npm install grunt-ember-templates@~1.0.0 --save-dev
- Create an
app/templates
folder for yourhbs
files. Create a fewhbs
files there. - Create a basic
Gruntfile.js
:
module.exports = function(grunt) {
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-ember-templates');
grunt.initConfig({
emberTemplates: {
default: {
options: {
templateBasePath: 'app/templates'
},
files: {
"tmp/templates.js": ["app/templates/**/*.hbs"]
}
}
}
})
grunt.registerTask('default', ['emberTemplates']);
}
- (Optional: Install grunt-cli with
$ npm install -g grunt-cli
and installgrunt
locally with$ npm install grunt --save-dev
.) - Run
grunt
in your console.
You can find the compiled templates.js
in tmp
folder.
Inside your Gruntfile.js
file, add a section named emberTemplates
. This section specifies the files to compile and the options used with handlebars.
Type: object
This defines what files this task will process and should contain key:value pairs.
The key (destination) should be an unique filepath (supports grunt.template) and the value (source) should be a filepath or an array of filepaths (supports minimatch).
Note: Values are precompiled to the Ember.TEMPLATES
array in the order passed.
Type: object
This controls how this task operates and should contain key:value pairs. See specific options below.
Type: boolean | string
Default: false
Include this option to ensure that the compiled output will be defined as a
single AMD module with a single dependency (ember
). If you'd like to output
individual templates as modules, skip this option and use the
templateRegistration
option described below.
If you'd like to customize the module name for Ember, pass this option a string.
(For backwards compatibility, the string "true"
acts like the boolean true
,
and will result in ember
being used as the module name. )
options: {
amd: "vendor/ember"
}
Type: boolean
Default: true
Disable this option to compile the templates to multiple individual files, rather than concatenating them into a single file. When concatenation is disabled, the destination property specifies the folder where compiled templates will be placed. The directory and file structure will mirror the source.
This option is useful for situations where you'd like to let a build optimizer concatenate files in particular ways.
options: {
concatenate: false
},
files: {
"path/to/destination/folder": ["path/to/sources/*.handlebars", "path/to/more/*.handlebars"]
}
Type: boolean
Default: true
Disable this option to skip template precompilation with handlebars.js and instead
wrap the template content with Ember.Handlebars.compile
. This will reduce template
compilation time during development. Don't disable this option for production build.
Type: function
Arguments: source
This option accepts a function which can be used to preprocess the raw contents of the source read from the template file.
You may want to use this function to strip comments or minify whitespace:
options: {
preprocess: function(source) {
return source.replace(/\s+/g, ' ');
}
}
Type: regex | string
A regex or string to match the base path to your template directory. If defined,
this path will be stripped out of template names by the default implementation
of templateNameFromFile()
.
options: {
templateBasePath: /path\/to\/templates\//
}
Type: regex | string
Default: /\.(hbs|hjs|handlebars)/
A regex or string to match the file extensions for your templates. Extensions
will be stripped out of template names by the default implementation of
templateNameFromFile()
.
For example, if you're using a non-standard extension for your template files, you can strip it out like so:
options: {
templateFileExtensions: /\.hbars/
}
Type: function
Arguments: fileName
This option accepts a function which takes one argument (the source template filepath, which has already been stripped of its file extensions and base directory) and returns a string which will be used as the key for the precompiled template.
For example, let's say that all of your templates are suffixed with _template
,
which you don't want included in the actual template name. You could strip off
this suffix as follows:
options: {
templateName: function(name) {
return name.replace('_template', '');
}
}
Type: function
Arguments: filePath
This option accepts a function which takes one argument (the full source template filepath) and returns a string which will be used as the key for the precompiled template object.
By default, this function strips away templateBasePath
and templateFileExtensions
from a filepath, and then returns the result of templateName()
.
This function should only be overridden if you need complete control over the returned template name that can not be achieved via the other options.
Type: string
Default: HTMLBars
This option defines the namespace of the template compiler.
For example, to use Handlebars
instead of HTMLBars
:
options: {
templateNamespace: 'Handlebars'
}
Type: function
Arguments: name
, contents
This option allows for custom registration of templates. It accepts a function
which takes as arguments the name
of a template (seetemplateNameFromFile
)
and its contents
(which may be compiled or not - see precompile
). This
function should return a string of JS code to be added to the generated file.
By default, this function assigns templates to Ember.TEMPLATES
with their
name
as the key and contents
as the value.
This function should be overridden if you need to register templates in an alternative fashion. For example, it could be used to define custom modules for each of your templates:
options: {
templateRegistration: function(name, contents) {
return "define('templates/" + name + "', ['ember'], function(Ember) { return " + contents + "; });";
}
}
Type: string
Default: bower_components/ember/ember-template-compiler.js
This option allows this default to be overridden to different version of the ember-template-compiler.js
.
For example, if there are upstream changes in Ember's compiler that haven't yet
been published with ember-template-compiler
, you could specify paths to local
versions of the template compiler:
options: {
templateCompilerPath: 'vendor/ember/ember-template-compiler.js'
}
A common configuration might be to combine the amd
and templateBasePath
options
as follows:
emberTemplates: {
compile: {
options: {
amd: true,
templateBasePath: /path\/to\//
},
files: {
"path/to/result.js": "path/to/source.handlebars",
"path/to/another.js": ["path/to/sources/*.handlebars", "path/to/more/*.handlebars"]
}
}
}
Here's an example task that watches for changes to your templates and automatically recompiles them:
watch: {
emberTemplates: {
files: 'app/scripts/**/*.handlebars',
tasks: ['emberTemplates', 'livereload']
},
}
-
This plugin was designed to work with Grunt 0.4.x. If you're still using grunt v0.3.x it's strongly recommended that you upgrade, but in case you can't please use v0.3.2.
-
Check the Release History below for version compatibility with Ember and Handlebars. The latest version of this plugin tends to track ember-latest, so you may need an older version to work with the latest official release of Ember.
-
Remember to name partial templates with a leading underscore. This underscore will be preserved in the compiled template name. For instance,
post/_edit.hbs
will be registered asEmber.TEMPLATES["post/_edit"]
.
Many thanks to the following projects upon which this was based:
I created this project as an alternative to grunt-ember-handlebars for the following reasons:
- to provide maximum compatibility with the grunt-contrib project, using features such as destination:source file arguments
- to allow for customizable template names based upon source file paths
- 2017/12/24 - v1.1.2 - Add Ember v2.17 support
- 2017/01/25 - v1.1.1 - Add Ember v2.11 support, improve testing.
- 2016/09/12 - v1.1.0 - Add Ember v2.7 and v2.8 support, extend tests for testing multiple Ember versions.
- 2016/03/28 - v1.0.0 - Removed
ember-template-compiler
andhandlebar
npm dependencies. RemovedhandlebarsPath
option. Default: using the bundledember-template-compiler.js
from Ember.js bower package. - 2015/02/09 - v0.5.0 - HTMLBars is now the default template namespace.
- 2014/11/17 - v0.5.0-alpha - Handlebars 2.0 compatibility via alpha ember-template-compiler. Thanks @smounir!
- 2014/10/29 - v0.4.23 - Fixed peer dependencies issue for
ember-template-compiler
1.8.x - 2014/10/23 - v0.4.22 - Updated
ember-template-compiler
peer dependencies for Handlebars 1.x compatibility. Thanks @cyril-sf! - 2014/04/02 - v0.4.21 - Introduced
concatenate
option. Thanks @joshvfleming! - 2014/03/11 - v0.4.20 -
amd
option can now accept a string to define Ember's module name. Thanks @Kerrick! - 2014/03/02 - v0.4.19 - Require node to be >= 0.8.19 to avoid peerDependencies issue. Thanks @rjackson!
- 2013/12/04 - v0.4.18 - Introduced
ember-template-compiler
dependency. Thanks @rjackson! - 2013/11/20 - v0.4.17 - Added
templateCompilerPath
andhandlebarsPath
option. Thanks @rjackson! - 2013/11/04 - v0.4.16 - Added
preprocess
option. Thanks @timrwood! - 2013/09/25 - v0.4.15 - Added
templateRegistration
option. Thanks @lukemelia! - 2013/09/05 - v0.4.14 - Now using lowercase module name
ember
withamd
option. Thanks @rpflorence! - 2013/09/01 - v0.4.13 - Upgraded ember-template-compiler.js to 1.0.0 (woot!). Added
precompile
option - thanks @manoharank! - 2013/08/19 - v0.4.12 - Added
templateBasePath
alias totemplateBaseDir
. DefaulttemplateFileExtensions
now also include.hjs
. - 2013/08/18 - v0.4.11 - Upgraded ember-template-compiler.js to 1.0.0-rc.7. Plus new
amd
,templateBaseDir
,templateFileExtensions
, andtemplateNameFromFile
options. - 2013/06/25 - v0.4.10 - Upgraded Handlebars to 1.0.0.
- 2013/06/24 - v0.4.9 - Upgraded ember-template-compiler.js to 1.0.0-rc.6
- 2013/06/09 - v0.4.8 - Upgraded ember-template-compiler.js to 1.0.0-rc.5 - thanks @AdamFerguson!
- 2013/05/22 - v0.4.7 - Deprecate
ember_templates
task in favor ofemberTemplates
. - 2013/05/16 - v0.4.6 - Upgraded Handlebars to 1.0.0-rc4.
- 2013/05/03 - v0.4.5 - Fixed multi-file output - thanks @seankeating!
- 2013/04/05 - v0.4.4 - Ember v1.0.0-rc.2 compatible.
- 2013/02/18 - v0.4.3 - Upgraded to grunt 0.4.0 final.
- 2013/02/17 - v0.4.3rc8 - Now uses ember-template-compiler. Upgraded to grunt 0.4.0.rc8.
- 2013/02/06 - v0.4.3rc7 - Updated to latest handlebars for compatibility with latest ember - thanks @codeofficer!
- 2013/01/24 - v0.4.2rc7 - Upgraded for grunt 0.4.0rc7 and handlebars 1.0.rc.2 - thanks @GManzato!
- 2013/01/10 - v0.4.2rc5 - Upgraded for grunt 0.4.0rc5 - thanks @trev!
- 2013/01/01 - v0.4.1 - Fixed file pattern matching
- 2012/12/26 - v0.4.0 - Upgraded for grunt 0.4.0 compatibility - thanks @trek!
- 2013/03/07 - v0.3.2 - Backported ember-template-compiler for Grunt 0.3 compatibility - thanks @rafshar
- 2013/01/24 - v0.3.1 - Fixed grunt-contrib-lib dependency
- 2013/01/24 - v0.3.0 - Grunt 0.3.0 and Handlebars 1.0.rc.2 compatible - thanks @GManzato!
- 2012/10/11 - v0.2.0 - Renamed grunt-ember-templates from grunt-contrib-ember.
- 2012/09/28 - v0.1.0 - Initial release.
- Please use Node.js v0.12 for testing and development, so we can keep the backward compatibility. I suppose, you use
nvm
for managing Node.js versions on your computer..nvmrc
added to the root folder, so it can jump back to this version when you open this project.
$ nvm install 0.12
Install node packages
$ npm install
Run tests:
$ npm test
or
$ grunt test
Adding a new Ember version test
- Add the new version string to the
EMBER_VERSIONS
constant inGruntfile.js
. - Create the expected result files and save in the
test/expected
folder. For example:test/expected/2.11.0