Handlebars : v1.0.rc.1
hbs.js : v0.4.0
Should work in both the java and node build environments.
Require.js >= 2.1.x (The last tag to work for Require < 2.1 is the 0.3.3
tag)
Write a template ( path: App/Template/One.hbs
):
<div class="best plugin ever">
This is my {{ adjective }} template.
{{! To include a partial: }}
{{! Use underscores instead of slashes in your path, }}
{{! and leave off the extension. }}
{{> App_Template_CoolPartial }}
</div>
Here's the partial (optional) ( path : App/Template/CoolPartial.hbs
)
<div>
{{! This can obviously have it's own partials, etc, etc }}
I am a partial
</div>
Include the hbs.js
plugin and the Handlebars.js
file in the same directory as your require.js script is. Usually, this is similar to the following.
~/Code/scripts/require.js
~/Code/scripts/hbs.js
~/Code/scripts/Handlebars.js
~/Code/scripts/App/Template/One.hbs
~/Code/scripts/App/Template/CoolPartial.hbs
Then require your templates like so:
require(['hbs!App/Template/One'], function ( tmplOne ) {
// Use whatever you would to render the template function
document.body.innerHTML = tmplOne({adjective: "favorite"});
});
And then the output into your body would be as follows:
<div class="best plugin ever">
This is my favorite template.
<div>
I am a partial
</div>
</div>
YAY!
Note for jam users: i18n is not currently supported in jam compile
due to configuration issues. This is being worked on.
I added a build-time/run-time helper for internationalization. The best way to see how this works is the demo.
Right now, the syntax for this is the same as handlebars helper syntax, with a helper named $
(for brevity).
{{$ "i18nkey"}}
This key should map to your locale json file.
{
"i18nkey" : "This is a localized string."
}
This 'helper' works differently than actual handlebars templates. It actually modifies the AST that is generated by handlebars at build time. It takes the 'helper' node and converts it into a simple content node with the correct localized content.
The benefit of this is not having to send your entire localization object to the browser in production apps. Instead the localized strings are added directly into the compiled templates. This is faster in every case. :D
The locale defaults to the en_us.json
file, but you can set the locale in your require.config (often needs to happen in both your app.build.js and your actual app code) and the locale will change along with that property.
Just put your helpers in template/helpers/*
and they'll automagically get pulled in as long as you write them as modules.
I find that many helpers are good helpers in regular code as well, so the following is a good practice:
define('template/helpers/roundNumber', ['Handlebars'], function ( Handlebars ) {
function roundNumber ( context, options ) {
// Simple function for example
return Math.round( context );
}
Handlebars.registerHelper( 'roundNumber', roundNumber );
return roundNumber;
});
Then in your templates, you can just do:
{{roundNumber Data.ThreeFourths}}
The system will make sure these modules are pulled in automatically from that directory. But if in your app, you need a rounding module (perhaps in a view/datanormalization place), you could do this:
require(['template/helpers/roundNumber'], function ( roundNumber ) {
var threeFourths = (3/4);
alert( roundNumber( threeFourths ));
});
It's just a module that happens to register itself.
You can specify a helper path callback in the config. The callback should be a function that gets a name of a helper as the only argument and returns the full path to be require()
-d, e.g., the following callback allows for automatic loading of helper modules written in CoffeeScript (via the require-cs plugin) under a non-standard location:
require({
hbs : {
helperPathCallback: function(name) {return 'cs!/helpers/' + name;}
}
}, ['main'])
Any template that begins with a comment, with only a valid json object in it will be read in as meta data for the template.
I encourage you to list the name of the template and give a description, though these aren't strictly necessary.
If you want to build stylesheets that are comprised of only styles needed by the templates that your app uses, I encourage you to add a styles
property to the meta info:
{{!
{
"name" : "template1",
"description" : "A nice template.",
"styles" : ["templatecss"]
}
}}
This will inject a link tag in dev mode to load in this style dynamically. At build time, a screen.build.css is created. At this time it is just a list of import statements. These can be inlined by many existing tools. Eventually I'd love it to just happen.
De-duping happens automatically, so don't worry if multiple templates require the same styles. The styles are injected in the order that they are read in, so usually from least specific to most specific. This is usually what you want, but know that if you do weird things, it could break.
In dev mode a few properties are added to your function (an object in javascript) as a helper with debugging and as a testing plug-point.
Those variables look like the following:
require(['hbs!template/one'], function ( tmplOne ) {
console.log(
'Variables referenced in this template: ', tmplOne.vars,
'Partials/templates that this file directly depends on: ', tmplOne.deps,
'Helpers that this template directly depends on: ', tmplOne.helpers,
'The metadata object at the top of the file (if it exists): ', tmplOne.meta
);
});
Note: All of these go away after a build, as they just take up space with data that is known at build time, which is the ideal time to get stuff figured out (speed-wise).
As long as all of your paths match up, this should precompile all of your templates and include them in the build.
I use them for coding happiness. It shouldn't bother you tooooo much, because it all gets built out in production. The hbs.js
file essentially gets written to the main.js file as a noop (a few empty definitions), and none of it's dependencies are included into the build. All the dependencies are inside the hbs
folder and this folder should be a sibling of the hbs.js
file.
To run the demo, go into the root directory of this project and run the following command.
./build.sh
This requires that node.js is installed. To see these in your browser, I'd suggest serving them quickly with the python simple server. (Linux/OSX assumed here, but there is a java implementation of the require.js build that should work just as well as the node version. I have not tried it though.)
cd ~/require-handlebars-plugin
python -m SimpleHTTPServer
You could also use the node 'serve' module.
npm install serve -g
serve .
Then visit http://127.0.0.1:8000/demo.html
for the dev version.
And visit http://127.0.0.1:8000/demo-build.html
for the production build version.
You should be able to see all of the templates and individual files in your network panel in dev mode, and just 2 minified files in build mode.
There are several configurable options, which you can set in your require.config:
require.config({
// ... other require config here
// hbs config
hbs: {
disableI18n: true, // This disables the i18n helper and
// doesn't require the json i18n files (e.g. en_us.json)
// (false by default)
disableHelpers: true, // When true, won't look for and try to automatically load
// helpers (false by default)
helperPathCallback: // Callback to determine the path to look for helpers
function (name) { // ('/template/helpers/'+name by default)
return 'cs!' + name;
},
templateExtension: "html" // Set the extension automatically appended to templates
// ('hbs' by default)
compileOptions: {} // options object which is passed to Handlebars compiler
}
})
This plugin registers every single template as a partial with it's modified module name (Slashes replaced with underscores, and no file extension).
App/Template/One.handlebars
is registered as App_Template_One
I'd encourage you to not call registerPartials in your code, and just use the automatic module registering, that way you definitely won't hit any collisions. You could also just be careful. We're all adults here.
In dev mode, loading the templates requires that you are on the same domain as your templates. This is standard same origin policy stuff. Once you build, though, it won't matter since there are no additional requests. Usually a few cleverly placed host overrides get you through the dev mode hurdles.
Very little of this is specific to handlebars, but things are just a tiny bit too specific about how everything works to properly generalize this.
If you'd like to implement this for your templating language of choice, you'll need:
- Has a pre-compile type functionality (unless you don't care about builds)
- If it has some concept of partials, that you can register them externally
- It eventually returns a function that takes data context and outputs something you can deal with.
- For any of the meta-data, you'll need some fancy regex or an AST to walk through.
I'd just turn your template language into a module first (just the old global name, or whatever), then look through the references to Handlebars
in hbs.js
and see if your templating language does something similar. It's not a terribly complicated process.
Most of the code in this is from James Burke and Yehuda Katz in require.js and handlebars.js (respectively). Those projects are under their own license. Any other code added by me is released under the WTFPL license.