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ember-handlebars-brunch

v1.2.0

Published

Adds pre-compiling support for Ember Handlebars templates to Brunch

Downloads

51

Readme

Ember Handlebars for Brunch

This Brunch plugin adds support for pre-compiling Ember Handlebars templates prior to runtime, utilizing the latest and greatest EmberJS build (1.0.0-RC.5).

It is included by default in the Ember Brunch skeleton. However if you would like to import it into your own custom Brunch project, the instructions below will get you up and running.

Installation and Usage

Add "ember-handlebars-brunch": "git+ssh://[email protected]:bartsqueezy/ember-handlebars-brunch.git" to package.json of your Brunch application.

Within config.coffee, set precompile: true within the templates compiler if you want to enable pre-compiling.

templates:
    precompile: true  # default is false
    root: 'templates/'  # default is null
    defaultExtension: 'hbs'
    joinTo: 'javascripts/app.js' : /^app/

A few reminders about the configuration object mentioned above:

  1. Make sure the extension of each template file matches the defaultExtension property
  2. The value you provide for root should represent a directory located under your app directory. If you do not provide a value for this property, ember-handlebars-brunch will, by default, set the template name to the path of your file, starting from app. For instance, without defining the root property, a template located at app/templates/index.hbs will be registered with Ember like Ember.TEMPLATES['app/templates/index'].

If using the exact example configuration above, your views and templates directories should look similar to this:

└─┬ app
  ├─┬ templates
  │ ├─┬ index
  │ │ └── login.hbs
  │ ├── application.hbs
  │ └── index.hbs
  └─┬ views
    ├─┬ index
    │ └── login.js
    ├── application.js
    └── index.js

Based on the example above, you can define your views like so:

// app/views/application.js
App.ApplicationView = Ember.View.extend({
    templateName: 'application'
});

// app/views/index.js
App.IndexView = Ember.View.extend({
    templateName: 'index'
});

// app/views/index/login.js
App.IndexLoginView = Ember.View.extend({
    templateName: 'index/login'
});

The precompiled templates are injected into the Ember.TEMPLATES namespace. You can access them like so:

var anotherTemplate = Ember.TEMPLATES['index/login'];

If you wish to require the template manually instead of using them directly within a view class, you have to use the full path to the file, starting from the templates directory;

require('templates/index/login');