handlebars loader module for webpack
npm install handlebars-loader




A handlebars template loader for webpack.
_Handlebars 4 now supported_
npm i handlebars-loader --save
``javascript`
{
...
module: {
rules: [
...
{ test: /\.handlebars$/, loader: "handlebars-loader" }
]
}
}
`javascript`
var template = require("./file.handlebars");
// => returns file.handlebars content as a template function
The loader resolves partials and helpers automatically. They are looked up relative to the current directory (this can be modified with the rootRelative option) or as a module if you prefix with $.
`handlebars`
A file "/folder/file.handlebars".
{{> partial}} will reference "/folder/partial.handlebars".
{{> ../partial}} will reference "/partial.handlebars".
{{> $module/partial}} will reference "/folder/node_modules/module/partial.handlebars".
{{helper}} will reference the helper "/folder/helper.js" if this file exists.
{{[nested/helper] 'helper parameter'}} will reference the helper "/folder/nested/helper.js" if this file exists, passes 'helper parameter' as first parameter to helper.
{{../helper}} {{$module/helper}} are resolved similarly to partials.
The following query (or config) options are supported:
- _helperDirs_: Defines additional directories to be searched for helpers. Allows helpers to be defined in a directory and used globally without relative paths. You must surround helpers in subdirectories with brackets (Handlerbar helper identifiers can't have forward slashes without this). See example
- _runtime_: Specify the path to the handlebars runtime library. Defaults to look under the local handlebars npm module, i.e. handlebars/runtime.esModule
- _extensions_: Searches for templates with alternate extensions. Defaults are .handlebars, .hbs, and '' (no extension).
- _inlineRequires_: Defines a regex that identifies strings within helper/partial parameters that should be replaced by inline require statements. Note: For this to work, you'll have to disable the Option in the corresponding file-loader entry in your webpack config../
- _rootRelative_: When automatically resolving partials and helpers, use an implied root path if none is present. Default = . Setting this to be empty effectively turns off automatically resolving relative handlebars resources for items like {{helper}}. {{./helper}} will still resolve as expected.node_modules
- _knownHelpers_: Array of helpers that are registered at runtime and should not explicitly be required by webpack. This helps with interoperability for libraries like Thorax helpers.
- _exclude_: Defines a regex that will exclude paths from resolving. This can be used to prevent helpers from being resolved to modules in the directory.handlebarsLoader
- _debug_: Shows trace information to help debug issues (e.g. resolution of helpers).
- _partialDirs_: Defines additional directories to be searched for partials. Allows partials to be defined in a directory and used globally without relative paths. See example
- _ignorePartials_: Prevents partial references from being fetched and bundled. Useful for manually loading partials at runtime.
- _ignoreHelpers_: Prevents helper references from being fetched and bundled. Useful for manually loading helpers at runtime.
- _precompileOptions_: Options passed to handlebars precompile. See the Handlebars.js documentation for more information.
- _config_: Tells the loader where to look in the webpack config for configurations for this loader. Defaults to .`
- _config.partialResolver_ You can specify a function to use for resolving partials. To do so, add to your webpack config:
js`
handlebarsLoader: {
partialResolver: function(partial, callback){
// should pass the partial's path on disk
// to the callback. Callback accepts (err, locationOnDisk)
}
}
js handlebarsLoader: { helperResolver: function(helper, callback){ // should pass the helper's path on disk // to the callback if one was found for the given parameter. // Callback accepts (err, locationOnDisk) // Otherwise just call the callback without any arguments } }
- _config.helperResolver_ You can specify a function to use for resolving helpers. To do so, add to your webpack config:
webpack
See documentation for more information regarding loaders.
See the examples folder in this repo. The examples are fully runnable and demonstrate a number of concepts (using partials and helpers) -- just run webpack in that directory to produce dist/bundle.js` in the same folder, open index.html.
See the CHANGELOG.md file.
MIT (http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license)