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Simple and powerful client-side templating
<script id="user" type="text/html">
<li>
<p class="name">Hello I'm {{ name }}</p>
<p><a href="http://twitter.com/{{ twitter }}">@{{ twitter }}</a></p>
</li>
</script>
// I Can Haz User?
var user = ich.user(user_data_object);
For simplicity and ease of use, ICanHaz includes janl's Mustache.js v0.4.0 (inside a closure) that way you can just include ICanHaz and then YOU CAN HAZ stuffs. Luckily Mustache and Mustache.js are generously MIT licensed. Mr. GitHub founder himself Chris Wanstrath (@defunkt) created mustache. Read the mustache documentation for more info. Then it was ported to JS by Jan Lehnardt.
Because building html elements using JavaScript or jQuery is ugly. There are several ways to do it, but the point is — it's ugly.
// vanilla JS
hello_div = document.createElement('div');
hello_div.setAttribute('class', 'hello');
my_list = document.createElement('ul');
hello_div.appendChild(my_list);
list_item = document.createElement('li');
list_item.innerHTML = 'My list item';
my_list.appendChild(list_item);
// jQuery
hello_div = $('<div class="hello"><ul></ul></div>');
hello_div.children('ul').append('<li>My list<li>');
It gets really problematic if you're building something a lot longer or more complex than this example. Not to mention, it's not a clean separation of concerns to write HTML in JavaScript.
Mustache.js gives us an awesome templating solution, here's a snippet from their docs:
var view = {
title: "Joe",
calc: function() {
return 2 + 4;
}
};
var template = "{{title}} spends {{calc}}";
var html = Mustache.to_html(template, view);
But the beauty fades when we're dealing with multi-line html in the browser because strings in JS can't include new-lines so everything has to be escaped. Then there's the problem of double vs. single quotes and before you know it...we're back in ugly land:
var template = '<div class="hello">\
<span class="title">{{ title }}</span>\
<ul></ul>\
</div>';
YES!
With ICanHaz.js you define your Mustache.js template snippets in script blocks
of type="text/html"
and give them an id
as a title for your snippet
(which validates, btw). This approach was suggested by jQuery developer @jeresig
on his blog. Then, on document ready ICanHaz.js builds a cache of all the templates
and creates a function for each snippet. All you have to do is say to yourself
for example "I can haz user?":
var data = {
firstName: "Henrik",
lastName: "Joreteg"
};
// I can has user??
html = ich.user(data);
At this point html
is a jQuery or Zepto (if they're included) object containing
your complete html with your data injected.
For each template you define (except partials), ICanHaz builds a retrieval function with the same name. If you don't want a jQuery object but just want the populated string you can just pass in true as the second argument to get the raw string. This is useful if your template isn't producing html.
If you don't have jQuery or Zepto, you can still use ICanHaz. You'll just get strings back instead of jQuery objects.
ICanHaz.js also supports mustache partials. To quote the original mustache.js announcement:
Partials are good for including often-used snippets, like navigation or headers and footer.
In mustache, partials are dead simple. You have a special tag
{{>partial}}
that you put where you want to insert the partial, create the partial that you want to be displayed and that's it. It is just a basic replace or macro include mechanism. Nothing fancy.
Just add your partial like any other template:
<!-- Main template, includes the "winnings" partial. -->
<script id="welcome" type="text/html">
<p>Welcome, {{name}}! {{>winnings}}</p>
</script>
<!-- Partial included via {{>winnings}} -->
<script id="winnings" class="partial" type="text/html">
You just won ${{value}} (which is ${{taxed_value}} after tax)
</script>
Then call the main template normally.
Optionally, you can call ich.addTemplate(name, templateString)
to add templates
and partials if you'd prefer to pull them from a server with AJAX or whatnot.
You can even do ich.grabTemplates
if you've loaded in some other page.
Beyond the retrieval functions that ICanHaz creates based on template names, these additional methods exist.
-
ich.addTemplate(name, mustacheTemplateString)
: Add new template. Could be useful if you prefer not to use<script type="text/html">
approach or want to lazy load 'em from a server or whatnot. -
ich.clearAll()
: Clears templates and partials cache. -
ich.grabTemplates()
: Looks for any<script type="text/html">
tags to make templates out of. Then removes those elements from the dom (this is the method that runs ondocument ready
whenich
first inits). -
ich.refresh()
: Just clears all then grabs new templates. This could be useful for pages loaded with ajax that contain other templates.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>ICanHaz.js Demo</title>
<script src="test/jquery-1.4.4.min.js"></script>
<script src="ICanHaz.min.js" ></script>
<script id="user" type="text/html">
<li>
<p>Hi I'm <a href="http://twitter.com/{{ twitter }}">@{{ twitter }}</a></p>
<p>I work for {{ employer }} as a {{ job_title }}.</p>
</li>
</script>
<script type="text/javascript">
// when the DOM's ready
$(document).ready(function () {
// Add a simple click handler for the "add user" button.
$('#add_user').click(function () {
var user_data, user;
// Build a simple user object, in a real app this
// would probably come from a server somewhere.
// Otherwise hardcoding here is just silly.
user_data = {
name: "Henrik Joreteg",
twitter: "HenrikJoreteg",
employer: "&yet",
job_title: "JS nerd"
};
// Here's all the magic.
user = ich.user(user_data);
// Append it to the list, TADA!
// Now go do something more useful with this.
$('#user_list').append(user);
});
});
</script>
<style>
body {
font-family: Helvetica;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>ICanHaz.js Demo</h1>
<h3>User List</h3>
<button id="add_user">Add User</button>
<ul id="user_list"></ul>
</body>
</html>
$.getJSON('/myserver/templates.json', function (templates) {
$.each(templates, function (index, template) {
ich.addTemplate(template.name, template.template);
});
});
There is also the icanhaz.load plugin, which makes this task a little handier
ich.load('template', function() {
// Called when template has been loaded
// and is ready for use
ich.template({
foo: 'bar'
});
});
ICanHaz.js was created by @HenrikJoreteg.
- Adam Brault - Documentation HTML/CSS
- rdclark - Test coverage and partials support
- kembuco - IE Bug found/squashed
- titanous - Zepto.js support
- jvashishtha - RequireJS support
- tonekk - ICanHaz.load plugin
This has been tested in a pile of browsers thanks to BrowserStack. The only
thing that may fail is the automatic grabbing of templates if you're in a browser
that doesn't support DOMContentLoaded
and you didn't include jQuery or Zepto.
Other than that all browsers should work. If not, it's a bug.
-
0.10.2
- Now supports RequireJS.
-
0.10.1
- Minor bug fix.
-
0.10
- Now includes versions without Mustache bundled.
- Mustache.js is now a submodule to simplify building different bundles with different versions.
- If you're using a CommonJS system, you can now do
require("ICanHaz")
. - There is no longer any distinction between partials and regular templates. They're all in the same cache. This means that you can use a template as a partial in one place and by itself in another place without having to duplicate the template.
- Builds the minified versions with Google's Closure web API so you don't need any local minifier installed to run "make".
- jQuery and Zepto are now optional.
-
0.9
- Made templates and partials caches public for easy inspection in console.
- Trimmed down overall size and removing
showAll
method. - Now compiled with Google's Closure compiler
-
0.8
- Now works with either jQuery or Zepto.js
-
0.7
- Now includes mustache.js so the only dependency is jQuery or Zepto.
- Attaches
ich
towindow
directly. - Added
showAll
,clearAll
,grabTemplates
,refresh
to public api.
-
0.6.1
- Bug fix in trimming templates retrieved from
<script>
tags.
- Bug fix in trimming templates retrieved from
-
0.6
- Added support for partials