browjadify

Inject compiled jade templates as functions in browserify modules

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import browjadify from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/browjadify';
</script>

README

Browjadify

browserify jade template inliner

This module is a browserify transform which will parse the AST for compileJade() calls and swap them out for the compiled contents of the jade file that they referenced.

Example

main.js

var tmpl = compileJade(__dirname + '/a.jade')

Applying the transform with the browserify CLI:

browserify . -o bundle.js -t browjadify

Applying the transform with the browserify CLI, but configuring via package.json:

browserify . -o bundle.js
{
  "browserify": {
    "transform": [ "browjadify" ]
  }
}

Applying the transform with the browserify API:

var browserify = require('browserify')

var b = browserify('main.js')
b.transform('browjadify')

b.bundle().pipe(fs.createWriteStream('bundle.js'))

The line from main.js now looks something like this, depending on the contents of a.jade:

var tmpl = function anonymous (locals) {
  //... jade template body here
}

A note about linting and testing

If you use a linter to check your code for the use of undefined variables, it will complain about this compileJade() function that you have magicked from nowhere. Furthermore, if you want to test your code with node, without browserifying it, you can't because the transform will not have been run. These two problems are solved by doing the following:

npm i --save browjadify-compile
var compileJade = require('browjadify-compile')
  , tmpl = compileJade(__dirname + '/a.jade')

By defining compileJade you are appeasing your linter. When this gets browserified, browjadify-compile resolves to a function that throws an error if it is called. This is helpful because it will never be called in the browser unless the transform is not run – so this will alert you to that issue.

When running this code in node, browjadify-compile resolves to a function which synchronously compiles some jade, as advertised! This means that you can run this code (in unit tests, for instance) without having to browserify and transform it first.

Happy templating!