2.6 KiB
grunt-contrib-jst
Compile underscore templates to JST file (part of the grunt-contrib collection). Submitted by Tim Branyen.
Getting Started
Install this grunt plugin next to your project's grunt.js gruntfile with: npm install grunt-contrib-jst
Then add this line to your project's grunt.js
gruntfile:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-jst');
Overview
This task compiles Underscore compatible templates into functions that can be concatenated and minified with existing source files.
Inside your grunt.js
file, add a section named jst
. This section specifies the files to compile and the options passed to underscore.template.
Parameters
files object
This defines what files this task will process and should contain key:value pairs.
The key (destination) should be an unique filepath (supports grunt.template) and the value (source) should be a filepath or an array of filepaths (supports minimatch).
Note: Values are precompiled to the namespaced JST array in the order passed.
options object
This controls how this task (and its helpers) operate and should contain key:value pairs, see options below.
Options
namespace string
The namespace in which the resulting JST templates are assigned to.
processName function
This option accepts a function which takes one argument (the template filepath) and returns a string which will be used as the key for the precompiled template object. The example below stores all templates on the default JST namespace in capital letters.
options: {
processName: function(filename) {
return filename.toUpperCase();
}
}
templateSettings object
The settings passed to underscore when compiling templates.
Config Examples
jst: {
compile: {
options: {
templateSettings: {
interpolate : /\{\{(.+?)\}\}/g
}
},
files: {
"path/to/compiled/templates.js": ["path/to/source/**/*.html"]
}
}
}
Release History
- 2012/08/12 - v0.2.2 - Added processName functionality & escaping single quotes in filenames.
- 2012/08/10 - v0.2.0 - Refactored from grunt-contrib into individual repo.