Simpler version of SlexAxton/require-handlebars-plugin without any extra helpers to configure (i18n). Just a simple Handlebars loader and precompiler for RequireJS.
This plugin uses the AMD text loader plugin to handle all templates loads. You will have to grab a copy of the Handlebars library too.
Download all this and put it in a public folder, then add the following RequireJS configuration:
require.config({
baseUrl: ...,
paths: {
handlebars: 'path/to/handlebars',
text: 'path/to/text'
},
shim: {
handlebars: {
exports: 'Handlebars'
}
},
packages: [
{
name: 'hbs',
location: 'path/to/hbs/folder',
main: 'hbs'
}
]
});
After that requirejs-hbs can be used like the original Handlebars plugin:
require(['hbs!app/templates/hello'], function (template) {
document.body.innerHTML = template({name: "Epeli"});
});
In your RequireJS config file, you could optionally add a hbs entry to configure this plugin:
require.config({
paths: { ... },
hbs: {
templateExtension: ".html",
compilerPath: "path/to/handlebars/full"
},
shim : { ... },
});
This value is the template files extension. Its default is ".hbs"
.
This is the path of the full version of Handlebars. The plugin will use this at
build time to precompile the templates. Its default is "handlebars"
, but you
will have to override it if you want your client-side handlebars module to be
the runtime only.
To avoid the need to load and compile all templates in the client in a
production environment, a project should be precompiled. Use the requirejs
r.js
command to do so. The hbs plugin will use Handlebars to precompile the
your templates files you specify as dependency of a module.
Once precompiled, a template does not need the full Handlebars library to be
rendered, the Handlebars runtime will be sufficient. So feel free to set the
handlebars module path to a runtime only library in your build file (see
the example. If you do so, make sure you define the
compilerPath
configuration value as mentioned above.
First of all, serve the files of the example
directory with a HTTP server. If
you have python installed, you can run the serve
script that will start a
server on port 8000.
The example should run without any problem. You can see in the browser developer tools that all the files are loaded uncompressed.
You can use the r.js
command to build the project with the provided
build configuration app.build.js. See that this file
is configured to include the Handlebars runtime instead of the full library.
You can modify the index file to use your freshely built module, juste follow the commentary. Refresh the page, and you will see that only one file is loaded containing everything your app need to be run.
$ cd example
$ ./serve
$ r.js -o app.build.js
$ firefox http://localhost:8000