This module lets you use Jade easily on the browser in an AMD environment - like RequireJS.
It provides:
- a method to return an AMD wrapped Jade runtime.js
- a method to compile Jade templates to AMD wrapped functions
- connect middleware to serve the complied templates for development
- example of a build that puts files in the right place for something like RequireJS to bundle
- Jade version agnostic - it uses the Jade that you've npm installed.
npm install jade-amd
See the README.md
file in the example
folder. It contains a guided tour through all the moving parts.
These are the interesting bits:
The middleware is there for when you are developing. It intercepts requests for template js and compiles and serves the templates directly. This means that you don't need to make any changes to the browser-side code.
var jadeAmd = require('jade-amd');
app.use( '/js/templates/', jadeAmd.jadeAmdMiddleware({}) );
Jade ships with a runtime.js
that lets you run precompiled templates on the client with out requiring the whole of the Jade templating system. Before Jade v0.31.0
this script needs to be wrapped to work with AMD loaders such as RequireJS. The following command wraps the runtime if needed, otherwise just passes it through unchanged.
# wrap Jade's runtime.js in AMD semantics
jade-amd --runtime > public/js/jadeRuntime.js
Goes through all the .jade
files and compiles them to JavaScript, and then wraps them for AMD loaders. See the README.md
and Makefile
in the example
folder for more details on how to integrate into your project.
# compile and wrap you templates
jade-amd --from views/ --to public/js/templates
Assuming that you have used RequireJS your browser JavaScript will now look something like this:
require([ 'templates/person' ], function(personTemplate) {
var rendered_content = personTemplate({ name: 'Joe Bloggs' });
});
And you can use exactly the same template on the server side!