templatizer.js
Simple solution for compiling jade templates into vanilla JS functions for blazin' fast client-side use.
What is this?
Client-side templating is overly complicated, ultimately what you actually want is a function you can call from your JS that puts your data in a template. Why should I have to send a bunch of strings with Mustaches {{}}
or other silly stuff for the client to parse? Ultimately, all I want is a function that I can call with some variable to render the string I want.
So, the question is, what's a sane way to get to that point? Enter jade. Simple, intuitive templating, and happens to be what I use on the server anyway. So... Jade has some awesome stuff for compiling templates into functions. I just built templatizer to make it easy to turn a folder full of jade templates into a CommonJS module that exports all the template functions by whatever their file name.
Is it faster?
From my tests it's 6 to 10 times faster than mustache.js with ICanHaz.
How do I use it?
npm install templatizer
- Write all your templates as individual jade files in a folder in your project.
- Somewhere in your build process do this:
var templatizer = require('templatizer');
templatizer(__dirname + '/templates', __dirname + '/demo_output.js', options);
So a folder like this
/clienttemplates
user.jade
app.jade
/myfolder
nestedTemplate.jade
Compiles down to a JS file that looks something like this:
var jade=function(exports){ ... }
exports.user = function () {}
exports.app = function () {}
exports.myfolder.nestedTemplate = function () {}
The awesome thing is... there are no external dependencies because they're just functions at this point. Crazy fast, SO MUCH WIN!!!!
Glob Paths
The directory path can also be a glob instead that can be used to match *.jade
files across multiple directories. For example:
templatizer(__dirname + '/app/**/*.jade', __dirname + '/templates.js');
Options
The third parameter passed to templatizer
is an options object.
namespace
(object, optional)
If you are using templatizer as a global in the browser (without requirejs, browserify, or something similar) by default your templates will be available at window.templatizer
. Using namespace
you can attach it to a different global object or rename the property it attaches to.
namespace.parent
(string, default window
)
This is the name of the object where you want to attach your templates.
namespace.defineParent
(boolean, default false
)
If this option is true
and namespace.parent
does not exist, it will be created. By default if namespace.parent
does not exist, templatizer will throw an error like this: templatizer: window.app does not exist or is not an object
.
namespace.name
(string, default templatizer
)
This is the name of the property on namespace.parent
where your templates will be attached.
Shorthand
If all you want is to attach the templatizer
object to an already created global variable, then you can just make namespace
the name of the object where it will attach:
templatizer(templatesDir, 'templates.js', {
namespace: 'app'
});
<script>var app = {};</script>
<script src="templates.js"></script>
<script>
document.body.innerHTML = app.templatizer.body();
</script>
dontRemoveMixins
(boolean, default false)
By default jade
will not compile any mixins which aren't being called from the file they were created in. This is usually a very good thing, since keeps file sizes down. But in some cases (especially when using the mixin support functionality), you may want to create mixins and call them from other places in your code or other files. Setting this option to true
will keep all mixins in the compiled source.
inlineJadeRuntime
(boolean, default true)
By default the jade runtime will be included into the generated template javascript file. In order minimize the file size you can set this parameter to false. Instead a jade
module is expected as amdDependency parameter. Otherwise an error will be thrown.
amdDependencies
(array, default [])
An array of AMD module dependencies you want to pass in to the generated templates javascript file.
jade
(object, default {}
)
jade
is an object which will be passed directly to jade.compile()
. See the Jade API documentation for what options are available.
Here's an example where we set the Jade compileDebug
option to true
.
templatizer(templatesDir, outputFile, {
jade: {
compileDebug: true
}
});
globOptions
(object, default {}
)
globOptions
will be passed directly to node-glob
. See the API docs for available options.
Mixin Support
Jade has a feature called mixins
which when compiled get treated as function declarations within the compiled function. Templatizer pulls these out of the compiled function and places them on the namespace of the parent function. For example:
// users.jade
ul
each user in users
mixin user(user)
mixin user(user)
// Jade mixin content
Templatizer will compile this as
exports.users = function () {}
exports.users.user = function (user) {}
This is helpful as it allows you to call users()
to create your list and then users.user()
to render just a single item in the list.
CLI
Templatizer comes with a bin script to use from makefiles/package.json scripts/etc, it works like this:
$ templatizer -d path/to/templates -o /path/to/output/templates.js
Tests
Run npm test
to run the tests (you'll need phantomjs installed). You can also run the tests in your browser with npm run browser-test
and going to http://localhost:3003.
Changelog
- v0.2.9 diff - Adding path normalize to avoid issues if passing in paths like
/thing/../otherfolder
.
License
MIT
Contributors
If you think this is cool, you should follow me on twitter: @HenrikJoreteg