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hbsrender

v1.0.9

Published

Render Handlebars templates and embed partials from the command line

Downloads

8

Readme

HbsRender v1.0.9

A CLI tool to render Handlebars templates with partials

Installation

npm i hbsrender --save

Why?

The standard Handlebars CLI interface doesn't allow you to include sub-templates (template parts) in templates to be rendered on the server.

Features

This module has a single purpose: to provide a CLI interface to render Handlebars templates server-side. It does that by giving you parameters to specify paths to template parts and to a JSON file containing the context.

Note: the output of this tool is not a compiled Handlebars template. The template is compiled in-memory and immediately used with the context data to generate a render.

Usage

./node_modules/.bin/hbsrender [options]

Options:

-h, --help                 output usage information
-V, --version              output the version number
-t, --template <template>  tempate to render
-p, --partial <partial>    partial to make available to the template
-c, --context <context>    JSON file with data to be made available to the template

You can use any number of "-p" parameters to specify as many template parts as you need. The value of the "-p" parameter must be specified in the format partial-name:path-to-file.

Example

./node_modules/.bin/hbsrender -t main_template.hbs -c ./context.json -p part1:parts/part1.hbs -p part2:parts/part2.hbs

This will render the main_template.hbs to standard output, pulling variables for the rendering from context.json.

To render to a file you can do:

./node_modules/.bin/hbsrender [options] > output.html

In this example, inside main_template.hbs you can refer to the partials "part1" and "part2" respectively using {{#> part1}} and {{#> part2}}.

You can also provide default replacementes for a partial (should it be not provided on the command line) using the following snippet:

{{#> part1}}
	
	...fallback content here...

{{/part1}}

Licensing

This package is released under the MIT License