hbr

1.1.0 • Public • Published

hbr

This is the default view engine of the most updated MVC web frameworkxprezzo using handlebars.js

Use

Using hbr as the default view engine requires just one line of code in your app setup. This will render .hbr files when res.render is called.

app.set('view engine', 'hbr');

To use a different extension (i.e. html) for your template files:

app.set('view engine', 'html');
app.engine('html', require('hbr').__express);

Helpers and Partials

hbr exposes the registerHelper and registerPartial method from handlebars.

var hbr = require('hbr');
 
hbr.registerHelper('helper_name', function(...) { ... });
hbr.registerPartial('partial_name', 'partial value');

For convenience, registerPartials provides a quick way to load all partials from a specific directory:

var hbr = require('hbr');
 
hbr.registerPartials(__dirname + '/views/partials' [, callback]);

Partials that are loaded from a directory are named based on their filename, where spaces and hyphens are replaced with an underscore character:

template.html      -> {{> template}}
template 2.html    -> {{> template_2}}
login view.hbr     -> {{> login_view}}
template-file.html -> {{> template_file}}

See the handlebars.js documentation for more information.

Note: This method is async; meaning that the directory is walked in a non-blocking manner to app startup.

Exposing locals as template data

hbr has the ability to expose the application and request locals within any context inside a view. To enable this functionality, simply call the localsAsTemplateData method and pass in your Express application instance.

var hbr = require('hbr');
var xprezzo = require('xprezzo');
 
var app = xprezzo();
hbr.localsAsTemplateData(app);
 
app.locals.foo = "bar";

The local data can then be accessed using the @property syntax:

top level: {{@foo}}
{{#each items}}
  {{label}}: {{@foo}}
{{/each}}

Note: In partials and templates, local data can be accessed without using @ prefix.

handlebars

The handlebars require used by hbr can be accessed via the handlebars property on the hbr module.

If you wish to use handlebars methods like SafeString please do so on this property. Do not register helpers or partials in this way.

// hbr.handlebars is the handlebars module
hbr.handlebars === require('handlebars');

Recipes

more than one instance

You can create isolated instances of hbr using the create() function on the module object.

var hbr = require('handlegrip');

var instance1 = hbr.create();
var instance2 = hbr.create();

app.engine('html', instance1.__express);
app.engine('hbr', instance2.__express);

Each instance has the same methods/properties as the hbr module object. The module object is actually just an instance created for you automatically.

People

Xprezzo is maintained by Ben Ajenoui and sponsored by SEO Hero.

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Install

npm i hbr

Weekly Downloads

2

Version

1.1.0

License

MIT

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57.3 kB

Total Files

94

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  • xprezzo