withOut
Yet another CoffeScript template
(without with
, coffescript, options and templates)
Concept
without
was started as proof of concept -
a way to implement
CoffeeScript templating with lexical scope,
without using with
.
It appeared to be possible, simple
(just a couple of lines of code - see build()
in source)
and (with some small extra ideas) even useful.
Some (very sound) reasons to use CoffeeScript
as template engine are listed in CoffeeKup,
without
is just another implementation.
Main feature of without
is that
template function is not altered in any way.
The only thing to change is context it is executed in.
It makes possible to pass it arbitrary arguments -
any number and names.
One can also use @
as one of datasets,
passed to template.
CoffeeScript itself was intentially
excluded from without
dependencies.
Feed compile()
with already compiled function.
Main reason for this design is
ability to run without
on JavaScript-only client,
where .coffee->.js compilation is performed on server side.
Or just include both without.js and coffee-script.js
on your client and use them together.
Usage
t = withOut ->
div id: 'Main', =>
span @msg
$ '#output'
.html t msg: "Hello"
Recompiling JST
# app/assets/javascripts/t/t1.jst.coffee
return ->
div id: 'main', =>
span @msg
# app/assets/javascripts/t/t2.jst.coffee
return ->
div id: 'second', =>
$var @msg
// Later in JavaScript...
t = withOut.JSTs('t/t1', 't/t2')
$('#output').html(t({msg: 'Hello'}))
One can pass paths to .JSTs() as plain parameters (see above),
or in array .JSTs(['t/t1', 't/t2'])
,
or even values of some hash .JSTs({one: 't/t1', two: 't/t2'}]
,
or mix all these ways (to any depth).
It's possible to directly pass a function as any JSTs argument.
t = withOut.JSTs 't/t1', -> do hr
Passing data
Generating the same HTML all the time is not very interesting. Templates usually need some data to insert into output.
There are several ways to pass
some info into withOut
templates:
Via argument(s)
As mentioned above, withOut
template can have
as many arguments as needed - from zero to infinity.
t = withOut (id, icon, href, text)->
a
id: id
href: href
-> i class: "fa fa-#{icon}"
text
One can pass parameters individually or combine them into objects.
Via @
JavaScript's functions get their data to process
both via arguments and this
(aka @
in CoffeeScript).
So do withOut
templates.
t = withOut.compile (a, b, c)->
dl ->
dt 'this'
dd @, br
dt 'A'
dd a, br
dt 'B'
dd b, br
# ...
t.call self(), a(), b(), c()
But using .call
is a bit annoying.
To make @
even more handy
withOut
template by default
passes it's first argument as @
either:
t = withOut (a)->
# Here @==a
div #...
t.call(data) == t(data)
# withOut.compile don't mix @ and arguments[0]
t2 = withOut.compile (a)->
div @name
div a.name # != @name
t2.call(data1, data2)
If you need explicitly pass this
into template -
use withOut.compile
and t.call()
.
In most cases one prefers plain withOut
and
plain t(data)
:
t = withOut ->
a
id: @id
class: @class
href: @href
=> i class: "fa fa-#{@icon}"
@text
html = t id: 'link', class: 'btn btn-default', #...
In first versions so did special function
named withOut.$compile()
.
Later (since v1.1.1)
this was delegated to withOut
itself.
withOut.JSTs
does the same.
withOut.compile
is preserved to
retain full control over this
and arguments
.
Via global variables
withOut
templates are recompiled
before first rendering.
Because of that they cannot access local variables available in the scope they are declared in.
myVar = 1;
t = withOut ->
span id: myVar # ReferenceError: myVar is not defined!
But global variables are still accesible inside templates.
You can use Math.max
or process.pid
(when in Node.js).
If Underscore/Lodash or jQuery
are imported as global variables (_
/$
)
you can use them inside withOut
templates too.
Via local variables
Finally, some emulation for local variables
was added to withOut
using .$
member
(of individual templates or withOut
itself).
withOut.$ ||= {}
withOut.$.myVar = 2016 # "Common" local var
t = withOut ->
span id: myVar # Ok
alert t()
t2 = withOut ->
span id: anotherVar # See below
t2.$ = anotherVar: 2016 # Local var
alert t2()
Locals are copied inside template when the latter is recompiled, ie on its first evaluation.
If .$
is a function,
it is called at that moment
and its result is used instead.
Using special values for locals one can create non-standard HTML tags to use inside template(s).
withOut.$ ||= {}
withOut.$.google = '<>' # "Global" tag <google>...</google>
withOut.$.fb = '</>' # "Global" tag <fb/>
t = withOut ->
google "https://www.google.com/"
fb href: "https://www.facebook.com/"
ms "https://www.microsoft.com/"
apple src: "http://www.apple.com/"
t.$ = -> # Get locals on demand
ms: "<>" # Tag <ms>...</ms>
apple: "</>" # Tag <apple/>
This can be considered as alternative to BYOT
described below.
Fat arrow
With @
passing style
template engine does it best to
correctly set this
in all nested functions.
It suits most templates
but can fail in some complex scenarios.
Fortunately, coffeescript itself can handle it!
Just use fat arrow =>
inside template function.
The arrow outside must remain slim ->
(see examples above).
If you don't use @
in template
or in some function in it,
you can also use ->
in that scope.
If in doubt, use =>
.
Aliasing tags
Engine uses some eval
magic to inject all tag names
(div
, span
, a
...) into template function.
It only fails with <var>...</var>
,
because it's reserved word in JavaScript.
So function for <var>
tag is named $var
.
You can also use same tag names (especialy i
)
inside your function as regular variables.
But then you cannot use those tags.
To fix - create some aliases:
func = ->
$i = i
$a = a
div id: 'Main', =>
...
for i in [1..@N]
li -> $i '#' + i
or even
func = ->
tag =
i: i
a: a
var: $var
div id: 'Main', =>
...
for i in [1..@N]
li -> tag.i '#' + i
If aliasing existing tag functions is not your dream - try:
BYOT (Build Your Own Tag)
Inside template function you can create another function for any tag
func = ->
myTag = tag 'www'
div ->
myTag 'google.com'
# <div><www>google.com</www></div>
For standard tag names
it will detect tag emptiness,
so (tag 'br') id: 1
will produce <br id="1">
,
not <br id="1"></br>
.
You can explicitly set type of created tag:
do tag 'br', false
gives <br></br>
,
whereas do tag 'div', true
just <div>
.
HTML5 doctype is intentionally omitted from withOut
.
If needed,
it can be generated as follow:
(tag "!DOCTYPE", true) html: true
html ->
head ->
# ...
To add other doctypes, one should use raw
pseudo-tag.
Pseudo-tags
Inside template function some other methods are injected:
text
Just outputs its arguments
div =>
text "That's ", @user
a href: '#', 'Read more'
is equivalent to:
div "That's ", @user, ->
a href: '#', 'Read more'
print
is alias for text
.
raw
Like text
, but doesn't escape HTML
script =>
raw '<!--\n', @js, '\n//-->'
notag
text
that can contain not only text,
but any tags either.
Think of notag
as tag without name,
who doesn't wrap its contents into <>
...</>
.
Like regular tags,
it can take attributes from the first argument,
but it silently ignores them
(nowhere to put arguments into).
It may seem pointless, but think about:
td =>
(if @id then a else notag) href: "/user/#{@id}", @name
comment
Add HTML-comment <!-- ... -->
div id: @id, =>
comment =>
span @msg
a href: '#'...
Nested comment allowed.
blackhole
Silently drops its contents and attributes. May be used to quickly cut HTML subtree (or include it back)
td ->
blackhole ->
a href: '#', "See more"
print '...'
Just add/remove #
to beginning of blackhole
line et voila!
coffeescript
Insert <script>...</script>
with its argument compiled to JavaScript.
coffeescript ->
alert "Alerts suck!"
HTML attributes
Normal tags (not pseudo-tags) support HTML attributes. Must be first (hash) argument to a tag.
Shorcuts .class
and #id
not supported - use general form.
a
id: "link_#{@i}"
class: "btn btn-primary"
href: "#/item/#{@i}"
@name
Also HTML5 data-*
attributes
(including nested hashes) supported:
input
type: 'text'
class: 'input-mini'
name: 'month'
placeholder: 'Month'
required: true
data:
placement: 'right' # Bootstrap's .tooltip()
trigger: 'manual'
title: 'Select month'
date: # Bootstrap's .datepicker()
format: 'mm/yyyy'
min: view: mode: 'months'
...
Nested templates
You can render template inside template
# app/assets/javascripts/t/t3.jst.coffee
return ->
div id: 'contents', =>
raw withOut.JSTs('t/t2') @
Testing
-
npm test
- test in node.js, using mocha -
npm test --www[=nnnn]
- start Web-server to test in browser -
npm test --win[=msie]
- test in Windows Script Host (cscript, Microsoft's JScript)
Debugging
Debugging coffee-script templates is always tricky task.
Since v1.1 withOut
make some steps toward developer.
But if source function (fed to .compile
) is minified,
these debugging facilities are disabled.
Fake source file names
After creating template (but before first rendering) you can set its id. Simply
t = withOut.compile ->
...
t.id = 'view/main/footer'
$('#footer').html t()
...
This name will be used to name source file, where recompiled template sits. Modern browsers (except Firefox?) show these "fake" files next to regular scripts found on webpage.
Templates without id
set on first rendering
get automatic names (simply 1, 2, 3...)
Fresh generated templates
(just after .$?compile
or .JSTs
) have id=null.
Breakpoint inside template
t = withOut ->
...
t.bp = 1
...
If you set bp
property on template,
every its rendering will be paused on debugger
statement
(which is situated inside without.js).
Hit Step Into
(or F11) twice
and you'll get inside recompiled source code of template.
Step it, set breakpoints, incpect stack frames, anything.
You can globally disable such breakpointing
by setting withOut.bp = false
.
If you set withOut.bp = true
any template will pause
(regardless of its own .bp
).
For .JSTs()
templates
t.bp=1
means break on first component
(since JSTs may hold series of sub-templates),
t.bp=2
breaks on second sub-template and so on.
t.bp = true
breaks on all
sub-templates of JSTs-template.
Installation
withOut
is ready to be used in most environments:
Plain script in browser
<script src="without.js"></script>`
require(['without'], function(withOut){ var t = withOut(...) })
Node.js (including Browserify and Webpack)
Use npm module without, eg
npm install -S without`
and
withOut = require 'without'
bower install without
Use without plugin.
docpad install without
Use gem without-rails:
gem install without-rails