Nephrite
Pre-compiles Jade to Coffee/Coco/LiveScript, allowing you to have the syntax of Jade with the best perfs (only interpolation is used). It also avoids you the pain of undefined and null by auto-soaking.
To make you understand this a bit better, let's say that your code :
ul#pages
for page in @pages
li: a(href="page/#{page}")= page
will get compiled to
'<ul id="pages">' + join((function () {
var ref$, results$ = [];
for (key in ref$ = locals.pages) {
val = ref$[key];
results$.push('<li><a href="page/' + page + '">' + page + '</a></li>');
}
return results$;
}()) || '') + '</ul>'
Jade itself can be slow due to several factors (with
, attrs
, escape
) and this project allows you to avoid that!
(the code is highly unstable and total crap)
Tho, it's used in html5chan and wowboardhelpers.
Extension
Files are valid jade files per se, minus the @
part.
Nephrite's default extension is .ne
- .jade
being valid too.
Usage
Compile it and use it later.
Attributes are passed as locals
, aliased to @
. You can pass an extra attributes object as @@
# compile it
nephrite = require 'nephrite'
src = nephrite 'a(b="#{@c}")', 'index.jade', options
js = Coco.compile src, {bare: true, filename}
# use it
fn obj, extra
The options object is passed to jade, without :
- the
safe
option, for @
and @@
replacement (see below).
Syntax
The syntax is the same as Jade, with a few gotchas :
- Don't prefix your tags with
-
, it's jade interpolation, to allow for even better perfs on static content :
ul#pages
- for (var i = 0; i <= 10; ++i)
li: a(data-page=i, href="/page/%{i}")== i
for tags, see just below.
-
Jade output is ==
(as seen just before). This is executed compile-time (by jade).
-
Jade interpolation is %{}
-
Tags are automatically recognized.
Currently supported tags are : if
, unless
, while
, for
, else
.
Loops are automatically joined.
-
To avoid complexity in the converter, for attribute interpolation you have to explicitely interpolate them :
a(href=foo) Foo!
will use jade's foo
local (compile time) whereas
a(href="#{@foo}") Foo!
will use your @foo
(locals.foo
, runtime).
-
Filter content is not modified in any way.
-
The "silent code interpolation" (and prelude) is ~
.
(take note that any code interpolation appearing BEFORE content will be moved in the prelude, out of the closure, for better perfs.)
For example :
~ template = require 'user-template'
~ /*^ this will be moved out of the closure function*/
#users
~ /*this will not*/
~ "this won't be outputted anyway"
- For bigger blocks, use
:prelude
filter.
:prelude
gen-classes = ->
classes = "post "
classes += "abc " if it.abc
classes
blah= gen-classes {}
Remember, of course, that you should avoid having too much logic in your templates
-
Do note one thing : replacement of @
is @@
is made globally, even in your text.
For example, div @hey
will give <div>locals.hey</div>
.
In order to avoid that, you can enable the "safe mode" through two ways :
~ "use safe"
div @hey
div= @this-is-interpolated
Be warned that this comes with a performance loss (the function is wrapped with an IIFE for the transpiler to recognize @
as this
), which is why it's not active by default.