karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor


Preprocessor for converting HTML files to AngularJS 1.x templates.
Note: If you are looking for a general preprocessor that is not tied to Angular, check out karma-html2js-preprocessor.
Note: If you are using Angular 2.x, use karma-redirect-preprocessor.
Installation
The easiest way is to keep karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor
as a devDependency in your package.json
. Just run
$ npm install karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor --save-dev
Configuration
module.exports = function(config) {
config.set({
preprocessors: {
'**/*.html': ['ng-html2js']
},
files: [
'*.js',
'*.html',
'*.html.ext',
'**/*.html'
],
ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
stripPrefix: 'public/',
stripSuffix: '.ext',
prependPrefix: 'served/',
cacheIdFromPath: function(filepath) {
var cacheId = filepath.strip('public/', '');
return cacheId;
},
moduleName: 'foo'
}
})
}
Multiple module names
Use function if more than one module that contains templates is required.
module.exports = function(config) {
config.set({
ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
moduleName: function (htmlPath, originalPath) {
return htmlPath.split('/')[0];
}
}
})
}
If only some of the templates should be placed in the modules,
return ''
, null
or undefined
for those which should not.
module.exports = function(config) {
config.set({
ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
moduleName: function (htmlPath, originalPath) {
var module = htmlPath.split('/')[0];
return module !== 'tpl' ? module : null;
}
}
})
}
How does it work ?
This preprocessor converts HTML files into JS strings and generates Angular modules. These modules, when loaded, puts these HTML files into the $templateCache
and therefore Angular won't try to fetch them from the server.
For instance this template.html
...
<div>something</div>
... will be served as template.html.js
:
angular.module('template.html', []).run(function($templateCache) {
$templateCache.put('template.html', '<div>something</div>')
})
See the ng-directive-testing for a complete example.
For more information on Karma see the homepage.