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can-compile

Compile CanJS Mustache and EJS views for lightning fast production apps

  • 0.3.1
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can-compile

NodeJS module that compiles CanJS EJS and Mustache views into a single JavaScript file for lightning fast production apps.

With NodeJS installed, just run NPM:

npm install can-compile -g

Command line

The can-compile command line tool takes a list of files (by default all *.ejs and *.mustache files in the current folder) or a list of filename patterns and writes the compiled views into an out file (default: views.production.js).

Examples:

Compile all EJS and Mustache files in the current folder and write them to views.combined.js:

can-compile --out views.combined.js

Compile todo.ejs using CanJS version 1.1.2, write it to views.production.js:

can-compile todo.ejs --can 1.1.2

Compile all EJS files in the current directory and all subdirectories and mustache/test.mustache. Write the result to views.combined.js:

can-compile **/*.ejs mustache/test.mustache --out views.combined.js

Grunt task

can-compile also comes with a Grunt task so you can easily make it part of your production build. Just npm install can-compile in you project folder (or add it as a development dependency). The following example shows a Gruntfile that compiles all Mustache views and then builds a concatenated and minified production.js of a CanJS application:

module.exports = function (grunt) {

  // Project configuration.
  grunt.initConfig({
    cancompile: {
      dist: {
        src: ['**/*.ejs', '**/*.mustache'],
        out: 'production/views.production.js',
        options: {
          wrapper: '!function() { <%= content %> }();'
        }
      },
      legacy: {
        src: ['**/*.ejs', '**/*.mustache'],
        out: 'production/views.production.js',
        options: {
          version: '1.1.2'
        }
      }
    },
    concat: {
      dist: {
        src: [
          '../resources/js/can.jquery.js',
          '../resources/js/can.view.mustache.js',
          'js/app.js', // You app
          '<%= cancompile.dist.out %>' // The compiled views
        ],
        dest: 'production/production.js'
      }
    },
    uglify: {
      dist: {
        files: {
          'production/production.min.js': ['<%= concat.dist.dest %>']
        }
      }
    }
  });

  // Default task.
  grunt.registerTask('default', ['cancompile', 'concat', 'uglify']);

  grunt.loadNpmTasks('can-compile');
  grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-uglify');
  grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-concat');
};

Programmatically

You can compie files directly like this:

var compiler = require('can-compile');

compiler.compile('file.ejs', function(error, output) {
  output // -> compiled `file.ejs`
});

Passing an object as the first parameter allows you the following configuration options:

  • filename {String}: The name of the file to be compiled
  • version {String} (default: latest): The CanJS version to be used
  • log {Function}: A logger function (e..g console.log.bind(console))
  • normalizer {Function}: A Function that returns the normalized path name
compiler.compile({
  filename: 'file.ejs',
  log: console.log.bind(console),
  normalizer: function(filename) {
    return path.relative(__dirname, filename);
  },
  version: '1.1.6'
}, function(error, output) {
  output // -> compiled `file.ejs`
});

Loading with RequireJS

To use your pre-compile views with RequireJS just add a custom wrapper in the options that uses the AMD definition to load can/view/mustache and/or can/view/ejs (depending on what you are using). In a Grunt task:

module.exports = function (grunt) {

  // Project configuration.
  grunt.initConfig({
    cancompile: {
      dist: {
        src: ['**/*.mustache'],
        out: 'production/views.production.js',
        options: {
          wrapper: 'define(["can/view/mustache"], function(can) { <%= content %> });'
        }
      }
    }
  });
}

Note

Always make sure that the output file is in the same folder as the root level for the views that are being loaded. So if your CanJS applications HTML file is in the app folder within the current directory use a filename within that folder as the output file:

can-compile --out app/views.production.js

Changelog

0.3.1:

0.3.0:

  • Allows compilation for different CanJS versions

0.2.1:

  • Switched to plain JSDom
  • Update to CanJS 1.1.5
  • Verified Node 0.10 compatibility

0.2.0:

  • Grunt 0.4.0 compatibility
  • Added Travis CI

0.1.0:

  • Initial release

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Package last updated on 10 Oct 2013

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