ember-cli-htmlbars-inline-precompile
Precompile HTMLBars template strings within the tests of an Ember-CLI project
via ES6 tagged template strings:
import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';
import { moduleForComponent, test } from 'ember-qunit';
moduleForComponent('my-component');
test('it renders', function(assert) {
var component = this.subject({
greeting: "hello ember testing",
layout: hbs`
greeting: <span>{{greeting}}</span>
`
});
assert.equal(this.$().html().trim(), "greeting: <span>hello ember testing</span>");
});
If you are using ember-cli-qunit@0.3.12
, writing component integration tests
becomes as readable as:
import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';
import { moduleForComponent, test } from 'ember-qunit';
moduleForComponent('my-component', {
integration: true
});
test('block params work', function(assert) {
this.render(hbs`
{{#my-component date=theDate as |daysAgo| }}
This happened {{daysAgo}} days ago.
{{/my-component}}
`);
this.set('theDate', new Date(2015, 2, 11));
assert.equal(this.$().text().trim(), "This happened 123 days ago.");
});
CoffeeScript support
Version 0.2.0
introduced the possibility to use this addon within
CoffeeScript, using ember-cli-coffeescript
. Since the
backtick `
is used to embed JavaScript, the hbs
function can be invoked with the
template as a normal string:
`import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';`
`import { moduleForComponent, test } from 'ember-qunit';`
moduleForComponent "my-component",
integration: true
test "block params work", (assert) ->
@render hbs '''
{{#my-component date=theDate as |daysAgo| }}
This happened {{daysAgo}} days ago.
{{/my-component}}
'''
@set 'theDate', new Date(2015, 2, 11)
assert.equal this.$().text().trim(), "This happened 123 days ago."
Installation
Install the addon via ember install ember-cli-htmlbars-inline-precompile
Troubleshooting
Plugin undefined didn't export a default Transformer instance
If you get an error like Plugin undefined didn't export a default Transformer instance
this likely means that the installed version of babel-core
is
outdated. You can check for the installed version via npm ls babel-core
within the root of your Ember-CLI application:
$ npm ls babel-core
your-app@0.0.0 ~/your-app
└─┬ ember-cli-babel@5.0.0
└─┬ broccoli-babel-transpiler@5.0.0
└── babel-core@5.1.13
Since this addon relies on a feature implemented in babel@v5.2.10
, you need
to update your installed dependency of ember-cli-babel
via:
rm -rf node_modules/ember-cli-babel
npm install
After that the version of babel-core
should be at least 5.2.10
:
$ npm ls babel-core
your-app@0.0.0 ~/your-app
└─┬ ember-cli-babel@5.0.0
└─┬ broccoli-babel-transpiler@5.0.0
└── babel-core@5.2.10
Starting the development environment via ember server
or ember test --server
should start as expected and your inline template strings are
compiled.
JSHint problems with ember-cli-mocha
: Expected ')' and instead saw '
If ember-cli-mocha
complains with a message like Expected ')' and instead saw '
,
you need to upgrade the used ember-cli-mocha
package in your Ember-CLI app/addon. This
has been discussed in switchfly/ember-cli-mocha#57,
where the solution is a clean npm install
.
Caveats
Keep in mind that the source files are transformed, so the inline template
definitions are replaced with Ember.HTMLBars.template(…)
statements. This
means that you can't do fancy stuff like string interpolation within the
templates:
test('string interpolation within templates is NOT supported', function(assert) {
var valuePath = 'greeting';
var component = this.subject({
greeting: "hello ember testing",
layout: hbs`
${valuePath}: <span>{{value}}</span>
`
});
If you need stuff like this, you need to include ember-template-compiler.js
in your test-build and use Ember.HTMLBars.compile("…")
within your tests.
Alternatives
Thanks
This addon wouldn't exist without the lightning fast response by open source hero @kittens,
who implemented the feature to replace a node with a source string not
even an hour after I mentioned it in gitter :heart:.